Abstract

Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) is a national-level dissemination programme for provision of evidence-based psychological treatments for anxiety and depression in the United Kingdom. This paper sought to review and meta-analyse practice-based evidence arising from the programme. A pre-registered (CRD42018114796) systematic review and meta-analysis. A random effects meta-analysis was performed only on the practice-based IAPT studies (i.e. excluding the clinical trials). Subgroup analyses examined the potential influence of particular methodologies, treatments, populations, and target conditions. Sensitivity analyses investigated potential sources of heterogeneity and bias. The systematic review identified N=60 studies, with N=47 studies suitable for meta-analysis. The primary meta-analysis showed large pre-post treatment effect sizes for depression (d = 0.87, 95% CI [0.78-0.96], p<.0001) and anxiety (d = 0.88, 95% CI [0.79-0.97], p<.0001), and a moderate effect on functional impairment (d = 0.55, 95% CI [0.48-0.61], p<.0001). The methodological features of studies influenced ESs (e.g., such as whether intention-to-treat or completer analyses were employed). Current evidence suggests that IAPT enables access to broadly effective evidence-based psychological therapies for large numbers of patients. The limitations of the review and the clinical and methodological implications are discussed. IAPT interventions are associated with large pre-post treatment effect sizes in depression and anxiety measures. IAPT interventions are associated with moderate treatment effect sizes with regards to work and social adjustment. A reduction in dropout and also the prevention of post-treatment relapse via the offer of follow-up support are important areas for future development.

Highlights

  • The GAD-7 effect mirrors the results of the Stewart and Chambless (2009) meta-analysis of the effectiveness of CBT for adult anxiety disorders delivered in routine practice, which illustrated that pre-/post-treatment outcomes on disorder-specific measures were large and, when benchmarked against the outcomes achieved in randomized controlled trials (RCTs), were equivalent

  • Analysis of the evidence accumulated over the last 10 years supports the effectiveness of the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme and demonstrates that innovative research and practice development have flourished within this context

  • A huge amount of investment has occurred to enable and to maintain the IAPT programme and this has been achieved via mental health service infrastructure change, human resource investment in recruiting a new therapies workforce and overall organisational culture development/change

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Summary

Objectives

Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) is a national-level dissemination programme for provision of evidence-based psychological treatments for anxiety and depression in the United Kingdom. This paper sought to review and metaanalyse practice-based evidence arising from the programme. A pre-registered (CRD42018114796) systematic review and meta-analysis. A random effects meta-analysis was performed only on the practice-based IAPT studies (i.e. excluding the clinical trials). Subgroup analyses examined the potential influence of particular methodologies, treatments, populations, and target conditions. The systematic review identified N = 60 studies, with N = 47 studies suitable for meta-analysis. The primary meta-analysis showed large pre-post treatment effect sizes for depression (d = 0.87, 95% CI [0.78–0.96], p < .0001) and anxiety (d = 0.88, 95% CI [0.79–0.97], p < .0001), and a moderate effect on functional impairment (d = 0.55, 95% CI [0.48–0.61], p < .0001). The limitations of the review and the clinical and methodological implications are discussed

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