120 results on '"van Ballegooijen W"'
Search Results
2. Genetic Data Provide Evidence for Wind-Mediated Transmission of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
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Ypma, Rolf J.F., Jonges, Marcel, Bataille, Arnaud, Stegeman, Arjan, Koch, Guus, van Boven, Michiel, Koopmans, Marion, van Ballegooijen, W. Marijn, and Wallinga, Jacco
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- 2013
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3. Unravelling transmission trees of infectious diseases by combining genetic and epidemiological data
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Ypma, R. J. F., Bataille, A. M. A., Stegeman, A., Koch, G., Wallinga, J., and van Ballegooijen, W. M.
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- 2012
4. Nowcasting pandemic influenza A/H1N1 2009 hospitalizations in the Netherlands
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Donker, Tjibbe, van Boven, Michiel, van Ballegooijen, W. Marijn, van't Klooster, Tessa M., Wielders, Cornelia C., and Wallinga, Jacco
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- 2011
5. Re-evaluating randomized clinical trials of psychological interventions: Impact of response shift on the interpretation of trial results
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Verdam, M. G. E., primary, van Ballegooijen, W., additional, Holtmaat, C. J. M., additional, Knoop, H., additional, Lancee, J., additional, Oort, F. J., additional, Riper, H., additional, van Straten, A., additional, Verdonck-de Leeuw, I. M., additional, de Wit, M., additional, van der Zweerde, T., additional, and Sprangers, M. A. G., additional
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- 2021
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6. Comprehensive database and individual patient data meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials on psychotherapies reducing suicidal thoughts and behaviour: Study protocol
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Hu, MX, Palantza, C, Setkowski, K, Gilissen, R, Karyotaki, E, Cuijpers, P, Riper, H, De Beurs, D, Nuij, C, Christensen, H, Calear, A, Werner-Seidler, A, Hoogendoorn, A, Van Balkom, A, Eikelenboom, M, Smit, J, Van Ballegooijen, W, Hu, MX, Palantza, C, Setkowski, K, Gilissen, R, Karyotaki, E, Cuijpers, P, Riper, H, De Beurs, D, Nuij, C, Christensen, H, Calear, A, Werner-Seidler, A, Hoogendoorn, A, Van Balkom, A, Eikelenboom, M, Smit, J, and Van Ballegooijen, W
- Abstract
Introduction Psychotherapy may reduce suicidal thoughts and behaviour, but its effectiveness is not well examined. Furthermore, conventional meta-analyses are unable to test possible effects of moderators affecting this relationship. This protocol outlines the building of a comprehensive database of the literature in this research field. In addition, we will conduct an individual patient data meta-analysis (IPD-MA) to establish the effectiveness of psychotherapy in reducing suicidality, and to examine which factors moderate the efficacy of these interventions. Methods and analysis To build a comprehensive database, randomised controlled trials examining the effect of any psychotherapy targeting any psychiatric disorder on suicidal thoughts or behaviour will be identified by running a systematic search in PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, Web of Science, Scopus and The Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials from data inception to 12 August 2019. For the IPD-MA, we will focus on adult outpatients with suicidal ideation or behaviour. In addition, as a comparison group we will focus on a control group (waiting-list, care as usual or placebo). A 1-stage IPD-MA will be used to determine the effectiveness of psychotherapy on suicidal ideation, suicide attempts and/or suicide deaths, and to investigate potential patient-related and intervention-related moderators. Subgroup and sensitivity analyses will be conducted to test the robustness of the findings. Additionally, a conventional MA will be conducted to determine the differences between studies that provided IPD and those that did not. IPD-MA may determine the effectiveness of psychotherapy in reducing suicidality and provide insights into the moderating factors influencing the efficacy of psychotherapy. Answering these questions will inform mental healthcare practitioners about optimal treatments for different groups of individuals with suicidal ideation and/or behaviour and consequently help to reduce suicide risk. Eth
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- 2020
7. Emergent trade-offs and selection for outbreak frequency in spatial epidemics
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van Ballegooijen, W. Marijn and Boerlijst, Maarten C.
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Pathogenic microorganisms -- Research ,Spatial behavior -- Research ,Science and technology - Abstract
Nonspatial theory on pathogen evolution generally predicts selection for maximal number of secondary infections, constrained only by supposed physiological trade-offs between pathogen infectiousness and virulence. Spread of diseases in human populations can, however, exhibit large scale patterns, underlining the need for spatially explicit approaches to pathogen evolution. Here, we show, in a spatial model where all pathogen traits are allowed to evolve independently, that evolutionary trajectories follow a single relationship between transmission and clearance. This tradeoff relation is an emergent system property, as opposed to being a property of pathogen physiology, and maximizes outbreak frequency instead of the number of secondary infections. We conclude that spatial pattern formation in contact networks can act to link infectiousness and clearance during pathogen evolution in the absence of any physiological trade-off. Selection for outbreak frequency offers an explanation for the evolution of pathogens that cause mild but frequent infections. evolution | pathogen | spatial model | spatial patterns
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- 2004
8. Molecular Sequence Data of Hepatitis B Virus and Genetic Diversity After Vaccination
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van Ballegooijen, W Marijn, van Houdt, Robin, Bruisten, Sylvia M., Boot, Hein J., Coutinho, Roel A., and Wallinga, Jacco
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- 2009
9. Van Ballegooijen et al. Respond to “Evaluating Vaccination Programs Using Genetic Sequence Data”
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van Ballegooijen, W Marijn, van Houdt, Robin, Bruisten, Sylvia M., Boot, Hein J., Coutinho, Roel A., and Wallinga, Jacco
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- 2009
10. Validation of online psychometric instruments for common mental health disorders: a systematic review
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van Ballegooijen, W., Riper, H., Cuijpers, P., van Oppen, P., Smit, J.H., van Ballegooijen, W., Riper, H., Cuijpers, P., van Oppen, P., and Smit, J.H.
- Abstract
Background: Online questionnaires for measuring common mental health disorders such as depression and anxiety disorders are increasingly used. The psychometrics of several pen-and-paper questionnaires have been re-examined for online use and new online instruments have been developed and tested for validity as well. This study aims to review and synthesise the literature on this subject and provide a framework for future research. Methods: We searched Medline and PsycINFO for psychometric studies on online instruments for common mental health disorders and extracted the psychometric data. Studies were coded and assessed for quality by independent raters. Results: We included 56 studies on 62 online instruments. For common instruments such as the CES-D, MADRS-S and HADS there is mounting evidence for adequate psychometric properties. Further results are scattered over different instruments and different psychometric characteristics. Few studies included patient populations. Conclusions: We found at least one online measure for each of the included mental health disorders and symptoms. A small number of online questionnaires have been studied thoroughly. This study provides an overview of online instruments to refer to when choosing an instrument for assessing common mental health disorders online, and can structure future psychometric research.
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- 2016
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11. Peer Review #2 of "Acceptance of the German e-mental health portal www.psychenet.de: an online survey (v0.1)"
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van Ballegooijen, W, additional
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- 2016
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12. Preventie & eMental Health: Kennissynthese 2013
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Riper, H., van Ballegooijen, W., Kooistra, L., de Wit, L., and Donker, T.
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- 2013
13. Internet-delivered treatments for generalized anxiety disorder. Effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and therapist factors [Review of: Björn Paxling (2011) Internet-delivered treatments for generalized anxiety disorder. Effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and therapist factors]
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van Ballegooijen, W.
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- 2012
14. Recensie: Prevention and early intervention in panic disorder. The effectiveness of the 'Don't Panic' course. [Review of: P. Meulenbeek (2010) Prevention and early intervention in panic disorder. The effectiveness of the 'Don't Panic' course.]
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van Ballegooijen, W.
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- 2010
15. Visual Screener for Common Mental Disorders (VS-CMD)
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Riper, H., Spek, V., van Ballegooijen, W., Unlu, B., Ruyssenaars, B., Mulder, B., and van der Kamp, L.A.
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- 2009
16. The quality of online suicide prevention in the Netherlands and Flanders in 2007
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Van Ballegooijen, W., Van Spijker, B. A.J., Kerkhof, A. J.F.M., Psychiatry, and APH - Mental Health
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The internet can provide valuable support for persons with suicidal tendencies. By means of the Google search engine we found and categorised 153 Dutch websites dealing with suicide. The websites relating to suicide prevention (n = 23) were scored for quality against a list of 17 quality features. The standard of the Dutch online suicide prevention websites is not optimal. Improvement is needed particularly in the find of e-help, and interactive possibilities need to be extended.
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- 2009
17. Internet-based, culturally sensitive, problem-solving therapy for turkish migrants with depression: Randomized controlled trial
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Unlu, B., Cuijpers, P., van t Hof, E., van Ballegooijen, W., Christensen, H., Riper, H., Unlu, B., Cuijpers, P., van t Hof, E., van Ballegooijen, W., Christensen, H., and Riper, H.
- Abstract
Background: Turkish migrants living in the Netherlands have a high prevalence of depressive disorders, but experience considerable obstacles to accessing professional help. Providing easily accessible Internet treatments may help to overcome these barriers. Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a culturally sensitive, guided, self-help, problem-solving intervention through the Internet for reducing depressive symptoms in Turkish migrants. Methods: A two-armed randomized controlled trial was conducted. The primary outcome measure was the severity of depressive symptoms; secondary outcome measures were somatic symptoms, anxiety, quality of life, and satisfaction with the treatment. Participants were assessed online at baseline, posttest (6 weeks after baseline), and 4 months after baseline. Posttest results were analyzed on the intention-to-treat sample. Missing values were estimated by means of multiple imputation. Differences in clinical outcome between groups were analyzed with a t test. Cohen's d was used to determine the between-groups effect size at posttreatment and follow-up. Results: Turkish adults (N=96) with depressive symptoms were randomized to the experimental group (n=49) or to a waitlist control group (n=47). High attrition rates were found among the 96 participants of which 42% (40/96) did not complete the posttest (6 weeks) and 62% (59/96) participants did not complete the follow-up assessment at 4 months. No significant difference between the experimental group and the control group was found for depression at posttest. Recovery occurred significantly more often in the experimental group (33%, 16/49) than in the control group (9%, 4/47) at posttest (P=.02). Because of the high attrition rate, a completers-only analysis was conducted at follow-up. The experimental group showed significant improvement in depression compared to the control group both at posttest (P=.01) and follow-up (P=.01). Conclusions: The results of
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- 2013
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18. An Internet-Based Guided Self-Help Intervention for Panic Symptoms: Randomized Controlled Trial.
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van Ballegooijen, W., Riper, H., Klein, B.E., Ebert, D.D., Kramer, J., Meulenbeek, P., Cuijpers, P., van Ballegooijen, W., Riper, H., Klein, B.E., Ebert, D.D., Kramer, J., Meulenbeek, P., and Cuijpers, P.
- Abstract
Background: Internet-based guided self-help is efficacious for panic disorder, but it is not known whether such treatment is effective for milder panic symptoms as well. Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of Don't Panic Online, an Internet-based self-help course for mild panic symptoms, which is based on cognitive behavioral principles and includes guidance by email. Methods: A pragmatic randomized controlled trial was conducted. Participants (N=126) were recruited from the general population and randomized to either the intervention group or to a waiting-list control group. Inclusion criteria were a Panic Disorder Severity Scale-Self Report (PDSS-SR) score between 5-15 and no suicide risk. Panic symptom severity was the primary outcome measure; secondary outcome measures were anxiety and depressive symptom severity. Measurements were conducted online and took place at baseline and 12 weeks after baseline (T1). At baseline, diagnoses were obtained by telephone interviews. Results: Analyses of covariance (intention-to-treat) showed no significant differences in panic symptom reduction between groups. Completers-only analyses revealed a moderate effect size in favor of the intervention group (Cohen's d=0.73, P=.01). Only 27% of the intervention group finished lesson 4 or more (out of 6). Nonresponse at T1 was high for the total sample (42.1%). Diagnostic interviews showed that many participants suffered from comorbid depression and anxiety disorders. Conclusions: The Internet-based guided self-help course appears to be ineffective for individuals with panic symptoms. However, intervention completers did derive clinical benefits from the intervention. © Wouter van Ballegooijen, Heleen Riper, Britt Klein, David Daniel Ebert, Jeannet Kramer, Peter Meulenbeek, Pim Cuijpers.
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- 2013
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19. Single-item screening for agoraphobic symptoms: validation of a web-based audiovisual screening instrument
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van Ballegooijen, W., Riper, H., Donker, T., Abello, K.M., Marks, I., Cuijpers, P., van Ballegooijen, W., Riper, H., Donker, T., Abello, K.M., Marks, I., and Cuijpers, P.
- Abstract
The advent of web-based treatments for anxiety disorders creates a need for quick and valid online screening instruments, suitable for a range of social groups. This study validates a single-item multimedia screening instrument for agoraphobia, part of the Visual Screener for Common Mental Disorders (VS-CMD), and compares it with the text-based agoraphobia items of the PDSS-SR. The study concerned 85 subjects in an RCT of the effects of web-based therapy for panic symptoms. The VS-CMD item and items 4 and 5 of the PDSS-SR were validated by comparing scores to the outcomes of the CIDI diagnostic interview. Screening for agoraphobia was found moderately valid for both the multimedia item (sensitivity.81, specificity.66, AUC.734) and the text-based items (AUC.607-.697). Single-item multimedia screening for anxiety disorders should be further developed and tested in the general population and in patient, illiterate and immigrant samples.
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- 2012
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20. Internet-based early intervention for depression and anxiety
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van Ballegooijen, W. and van Ballegooijen, W.
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- 2012
21. The effects of an Internet based self-help course for reducing panic symptoms – Don’t Panic Online: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial.
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van Ballegooijen, W., Riper, H., van Straten, A., Kramer, J., Conijn, B., Cuijpers, P., van Ballegooijen, W., Riper, H., van Straten, A., Kramer, J., Conijn, B., and Cuijpers, P.
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- 2011
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22. De kwaliteit van online suicidepreventie in Nederland en Vlaanderen in 2007
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van Ballegooijen, W., van Spijker, B.A.J., Kerkhof, A.J.F.M., van Ballegooijen, W., van Spijker, B.A.J., and Kerkhof, A.J.F.M.
- Abstract
Het internet kan een aantrekkelijke hulpbron zijn voor suïcidale personen. Met zoekmachine Google werden 153 Nederlandstalige websites over suïcide opgespoord en gecategoriseerd. Vervolgens werden de websites voor suïcidepreventie (n = 23) beoordeeld op kwaliteit aan de hand van 17 kwaliteitskenmerken. De Nederlandstalige onlinesuïcidepreventie bleek niet optimaal. Vooral op het gebied van e-hulp en andere interactieve mogelijkheden is ruimte voor verbetering. BACKGROUND: The internet can provide valuable support for persons with suicidal tendencies. By means of the Google search engine we found and categorised 153 Dutch websites dealing with suicide. The websites relating to suicide prevention (n = 23) were scored for quality against a list of 17 quality features. The standard of the Dutch online suicide prevention websites is not optimal. Improvement is needed particularly in the field of e-help, and interactive possibilities need to be extended
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- 2009
23. Relating Phylogenetic Trees to Transmission Trees of Infectious Disease Outbreaks
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Ypma, Rolf J F, primary, van Ballegooijen, W Marijn, additional, and Wallinga, Jacco, additional
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- 2013
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24. Finding Evidence for Local Transmission of Contagious Disease in Molecular Epidemiological Datasets
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Ypma, Rolf J. F., primary, Donker, Tjibbe, additional, van Ballegooijen, W. Marijn, additional, and Wallinga, Jacco, additional
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- 2013
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25. Genetic Data Provide Evidence for Wind-Mediated Transmission of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza
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Ypma, Rolf J.F., primary, Jonges, Marcel, additional, Bataille, Arnaud, additional, Stegeman, Arjan, additional, Koch, Guus, additional, van Boven, Michiel, additional, Koopmans, Marion, additional, van Ballegooijen, W. Marijn, additional, and Wallinga, Jacco, additional
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- 2012
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26. Unravelling transmission trees of infectious diseases by combining genetic and epidemiological data
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Ypma, R. J. F., primary, Bataille, A. M. A., additional, Stegeman, A., additional, Koch, G., additional, Wallinga, J., additional, and van Ballegooijen, W. M., additional
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- 2011
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27. Different transmission patterns in the early stages of the influenza A(H1N1)v pandemic: A comparative analysis of 12 European countries
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Flasche, Stefan, primary, Hens, Niel, additional, Boëlle, Pierre-Yves, additional, Mossong, Joël, additional, van Ballegooijen, W. Marijn, additional, Nunes, Baltazar, additional, Rizzo, Caterina, additional, Popovici, Florin, additional, Santa-Olalla, Patricia, additional, Hrubá, Frantiska, additional, Parmakova, Kremena, additional, Baguelin, Marc, additional, van Hoek, Albert Jan, additional, Desenclos, Jean-Claude, additional, Bernillon, Pascale, additional, Cámara, Amparro Larrauri, additional, Wallinga, Jacco, additional, Asikainen, Tommi, additional, White, Peter J., additional, and Edmunds, W. John, additional
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- 2011
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28. Improved tracing of hepatitis B virus transmission chains by phylogenetic analysis based on C region sequences
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Boot, Hein J., primary, Cremer, Jeroen, additional, Koedijk, Femke D.H., additional, van Ballegooijen, W. Marijn, additional, and Op de Coul, Eline L.M., additional
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- 2007
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29. Is population-level perversity a likely outcome of mass vaccination against HIV?
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Bogaards, Johannes A, primary, van Ballegooijen, W Marijn, additional, Jan Weverling, Gerrit, additional, Boerlijst, Maarten C, additional, and Goudsmit, Jaap, additional
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- 2005
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30. Improved tracing of hepatitis B virus transmission chains by phylogenetic analysis based on C region sequences.
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Boot, Hein J., Cremer, Jeroen, Koedijk, Femke D.H., van Ballegooijen, W. Marijn, and Op de Coul, Eline L.M.
- Abstract
An effective vaccine is available for the hepatitis B virus (HBV), which is a very contagious human pathogen. The prevalence of chronic HBV infection is very low in the Netherlands (<0.5%), and no universal vaccination is in place. Instead, a program of vaccination for targeted groups at high risk of HBV exposure has been implemented. Because transmission of HBV can occur by various routes, the effectiveness of this targeted vaccination strategy is difficult to assess. Molecular typing data for the surface protein encoding gene of HBV isolates, in combination with epidemiological data, provide some insight into the main transmission routes. Due to the low mutation rate of the HBV genome, many isolates have identical S region sequences, which hampers phylogenetic analysis and identification of transmission chains. The molecular epidemiological analysis of acute HBV isolates based on the surface and core protein encoding regions were compared. The nucleotide diversity found in the C region was statistically significant greater (1.5 times) than in the S region, and phylogenetic analysis based on the C region showed a higher resolution. C region analysis resulted in an almost 50% reduction of genotype A isolates with identical sequences. C region analysis also indicated that no long-chain transmission of genotype D strains is occurring in the Netherlands, as all genotype D isolates have unique C region sequences. Defining the goals of molecular typing of HBV isolates should precede the choice for phylogenetic analysis on the basis of either C or S region sequences. J. Med. Virol. 80:233-241, 2008. © 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2008
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31. The effects of an Internet based self-help course for reducing panic symptoms - Don't Panic Online: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
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Kramer Jeannet, van Straten Annemieke, Riper Heleen, van Ballegooijen Wouter, Conijn Barbara, and Cuijpers Pim
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Internet based self-help for panic disorder (PD) has proven to be effective. However, studies so far have focussed on treating a full-blown disorder. Panic symptoms that do not meet DSM-IV criteria are more prevalent than the full-blown disorder and patients with sub-clinical panic symptoms are at risk of developing PD. This study is a randomised controlled trial aimed to evaluate an Internet based self-help intervention for sub-clinical and mild PD compared to a waiting list control group. Methods Participants with mild or sub-clinical PD (N = 128) will be recruited in the general population. Severity of panic and anxiety symptoms are the primary outcome measures. Secondary outcomes include depressive symptoms, quality of life, loss of production and health care consumption. Assessments will take place on the Internet at baseline and three months after baseline. Discussion Results will indicate the effectiveness of Internet based self-help for sub-clinical and mild PD. Strengths of this design are the external validity and the fact that it is almost completely conducted online. Trial registration Netherlands Trial Register (NTR): NTR1639 The Netherlands Trial Register is part of the Dutch Cochrane Centre.
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- 2011
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32. Suicidal Ideation and Suicide Attempts After Direct or Indirect Psychotherapy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.
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van Ballegooijen W, Rawee J, Palantza C, Miguel C, Harrer M, Cristea I, de Winter R, Gilissen R, Eikelenboom M, Beekman A, and Cuijpers P
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Importance: Suicidal ideation and suicide attempts are debilitating mental health problems that are often treated with indirect psychotherapy (ie, psychotherapy that focuses on other mental health problems, such as depression or personality disorders). The effects of direct and indirect psychotherapy on suicidal ideation have not yet been examined in a meta-analysis, and several trials have been published since a previous meta-analysis examined the effect size of direct and indirect psychotherapy on suicide attempts., Objective: To investigate the effect sizes of direct and indirect psychotherapy on suicidal ideation and the incidence of suicide attempts., Data Sources: PubMed, Embase, PsycInfo, Web of Science, Scopus, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were searched for articles published up until April 1, 2023., Study Selection: Randomized clinical trials of psychotherapy for any mental health problem, delivered in any setting, compared with any control group, and reporting suicidal ideation or suicide attempts were included. Studies measuring suicidal ideation with 1 item were excluded., Data Extraction and Synthesis: PRISMA guidelines were followed. Summary data were extracted by 2 independent researchers and pooled using 3-level meta-analyses., Main Outcomes and Measures: Hedges g was pooled for suicidal ideation and relative risk (RR) was pooled for suicide attempts., Results: Of 15 006 studies identified, 147 comprising 193 comparisons and 11 001 participants were included. Direct and indirect psychotherapy conditions were associated with reduced suicidal ideation (direct: g, -0.39; 95% CI, -0.53 to -0.24; I2, 83.2; indirect: g, -0.30; 95% CI, -0.42 to -0.18; I2, 52.2). Direct and indirect psychotherapy conditions were also associated with reduced suicide attempts (direct: RR, 0.72; 95% CI, 0.62 to 0.84; I2, 40.5; indirect: RR, 0.68; 95% CI, 0.48 to 0.95; I2, 0). Sensitivity analyses largely confirmed these results., Conclusions and Relevance: Direct and indirect interventions had similar effect sizes for reducing suicidal ideation and suicide attempts. Suicide prevention strategies could make greater use of indirect treatments to provide effective interventions for people who would not likely seek treatment for suicidal ideation or self-harm.
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- 2024
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33. Amount and frequency of psychotherapy as predictors of treatment outcome for adult depression: A meta-regression analysis.
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Ciharova M, Karyotaki E, Miguel C, Walsh E, de Ponti N, Amarnath A, van Ballegooijen W, Riper H, Arroll B, and Cuijpers P
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- Humans, Adult, Treatment Outcome, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Regression Analysis, Depressive Disorder therapy, Depression therapy, Psychotherapy methods
- Abstract
Background: It is not clear whether the amount and frequency of psychotherapy is associated with treatment effects for adult depression. We investigated whether a number of indicators of the amount and frequency of psychotherapy were related to the treatment effects in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing individual, face-to-face psychotherapy to a control group (e.g., care-as-usual [CAU] or waitlist condition [WL])., Methods: Four databases were systematically searched, and meta-regression analyses conducted to assess the relationship between the effect size (Hedges' g) of the treatment and number of sessions, duration of psychotherapy, total contact time with the therapist, and number of sessions per week., Results: We included 176 studies (210 comparisons) with 15,158 participants. We did not find a relationship between the effect size, and number of sessions, or total contact time. There was a small negative association between duration of treatment and the effect size, an additional week of treatment was related to a 0.014 decrease in the effect size. In addition, there was a strong association between number of sessions per week and the effect size, an increase from one to two sessions per week was related to an effect size higher by 0.596. Both associations were no longer significant when controlling for characteristics of studies., Limitations: The current findings are correlational, future research should thus address this question in an RCT., Conclusions: We should deliver brief therapies, and thus shorten waiting lists. More sessions, if necessary, should be delivered with higher frequency and over a shorter period of time., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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34. Symptoms of a feather flock together? An exploratory secondary dynamic time warp analysis of 11 single case time series of suicidal ideation and related symptoms.
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de Beurs D, Giltay EJ, Nuij C, O'Connor R, de Winter RFP, Kerkhof A, van Ballegooijen W, and Riper H
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Ecological Momentary Assessment, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Algorithms, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Suicidal ideation fluctuates over time, as does its related risk factors. Little is known about the difference or similarities of the temporal patterns. The current exploratory secondary analysis examines which risk symptoms have similar time dynamics using a mathematical algorithm called dynamic time warping (DTW). Ecological momentary assessment data was used of 11 depressed psychiatric outpatients with suicidal ideation who answered three daytime surveys at semi-random sampling points for a period of three to six months. Patients with 45 assessments or more were included. Results revealed significant inter-individual variability in symptom dynamics and clustering, with certain symptoms often clustering due to similar temporal patterns, notably feeling sad, hopelessness, feeling stuck, and worrying. The directed network analyses shed light on the temporal order, highlighting entrapment and worrying as symptoms strongly related to suicide ideation. Still, all patients also showed unique directed networks. While for some patients changes in entrapment directly preceded change in suicide ideation, the reverse temporal ordering was also found. Relatedly, within some patients, perceived burdensomeness played a pivotal role, whereas in others it was unconnected to other symptoms. The study underscores the individualized nature of symptom dynamics and challenges linear models of progression, advocating for personalized treatment strategies., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no competing interests to declare., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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35. Absolute and relative outcomes of psychotherapies for eight mental disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Cuijpers P, Miguel C, Ciharova M, Harrer M, Basic D, Cristea IA, de Ponti N, Driessen E, Hamblen J, Larsen SE, Matbouriahi M, Papola D, Pauley D, Plessen CY, Pfund RA, Setkowski K, Schnurr PP, van Ballegooijen W, Wang Y, Riper H, van Straten A, Sijbrandij M, Furukawa TA, and Karyotaki E
- Abstract
Psychotherapies are first-line treatments for most mental disorders, but their absolute outcomes (i.e., response and remission rates) are not well studied, despite the relevance of such information for health care users, providers and policy makers. We aimed to examine absolute and relative outcomes of psychotherapies across eight mental disorders: major depressive disorder (MDD), social anxiety disorder, panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), specific phobia, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and borderline personality disorder (BPD). We used a series of living systematic reviews included in the Metapsy initiative (www.metapsy.org), with a common strategy for literature search, inclusion of studies and extraction of data, and a common format for the analyses. Literature search was conducted in major bibliographical databases (PubMed, PsycINFO, Embase, and the Cochrane Register of Controlled Trials) up to January 1, 2023. We included randomized controlled trials comparing psychotherapies for any of the eight mental disorders, established by a diagnostic interview, with a control group (waitlist, care-as-usual, or pill placebo). We conducted random-effects model pairwise meta-analyses. The main outcome was the absolute rate of response (at least 50% symptom reduction between baseline and post-test) in the treatment and control conditions. Secondary outcomes included the relative risk (RR) of response, and the number needed to treat (NNT). Random-effects meta-analyses of the included 441 trials (33,881 patients) indicated modest response rates for psychotherapies: 0.42 (95% CI: 0.39-0.45) for MDD; 0.38 (95% CI: 0.33-0.43) for PTSD; 0.38 (95% CI: 0.30-0.47) for OCD; 0.38 (95% CI: 0.33-0.43) for panic disorder; 0.36 (95% CI: 0.30-0.42) for GAD; 0.32 (95% CI: 0.29-0.37) for social anxiety disorder; 0.32 (95% CI: 0.23-0.42) for specific phobia; and 0.24 (95% CI: 0.15-0.36) for BPD. Most sensitivity analyses broadly supported these findings. The RRs were significant for all disorders, except BPD. Our conclusion is that most psychotherapies for the eight mental disorders are effective compared with control conditions, but absolute response rates are modest. More effective treatments and interventions for those not responding to a first-line treatment are needed., (© 2024 World Psychiatric Association.)
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- 2024
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36. Day-to-day affect fluctuations in adults with childhood trauma history: a two-week ecological momentary assessment study.
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Kuzminskaite E, Vinkers CH, Smit AC, van Ballegooijen W, Elzinga BM, Riese H, Milaneschi Y, and Penninx BWJH
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- Adult, Humans, Female, Male, Ecological Momentary Assessment, Retrospective Studies, Emotions, Affect physiology, Adverse Childhood Experiences
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Background: Childhood trauma (CT) may increase vulnerability to psychopathology through affective dysregulation (greater variability, autocorrelation, and instability of emotional symptoms). However, CT associations with dynamic affect fluctuations while considering differences in mean affect levels across CT status have been understudied., Methods: 346 adults (age = 49.25 ± 12.55, 67.0% female) from the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety participated in ecological momentary assessment. Positive and negative affect (PA, NA) were measured five times per day for two weeks by electronic diaries. Retrospectively-reported CT included emotional neglect and emotional/physical/sexual abuse. Linear regressions determined associations between CT and affect fluctuations, controlling for age, sex, education, and mean affect levels., Results: Compared to those without CT, individuals with CT reported significantly lower mean PA levels (Cohen's d = -0.620) and higher mean NA levels ( d = 0.556) throughout the two weeks. CT was linked to significantly greater PA variability ( d = 0.336), NA variability ( d = 0.353), and NA autocorrelation ( d = 0.308), with strongest effects for individuals reporting higher CT scores. However, these effects were entirely explained by differences in mean affect levels between the CT groups. Findings suggested consistency of results in adults with and without lifetime depressive/anxiety disorders and across CT types, with sexual abuse showing the smallest effects., Conclusions: Individuals with CT show greater affective dysregulation during the two-week monitoring of emotional symptoms, likely due to their consistently lower PA and higher NA levels. It is essential to consider mean affect level when interpreting the impact of CT on affect dynamics.
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- 2024
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37. Assessment of suicidality in trials of psychological interventions for depression: a meta-analysis.
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Miguel C, Cecconi J, Harrer M, van Ballegooijen W, Bhattacharya S, Karyotaki E, Cuijpers P, Gentili C, and Cristea IA
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- Humans, Psychosocial Intervention methods, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Psychotherapy methods, Depression therapy, Depression psychology, Suicide psychology, Suicide, Attempted psychology, Suicidal Ideation
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Background: Psychological interventions that are efficacious as treatments for depression could indirectly affect suicide-related outcomes. We examined suicidal thoughts and behaviours as eligibility criteria, outcomes, and adverse events across trials of psychotherapy for depression., Methods: We used a publicly available meta-analytic database developed through systematic searches (updated as of May 1, 2023) to identify randomised controlled trials in which a psychological intervention for depression was compared with an inactive or non-specific control condition in adults with depression and in which any suicide-related outcomes were reported. We also identified studies in which suicide risk was an exclusion criterion. We excluded inpatient studies and trials of unguided digital interventions or collaborative care that included a psychological component. Pairs of reviewers worked independently to select studies and extract data. In a random-effects meta-analysis with robust variance estimation, we assessed the effect of the psychological intervention on suicide outcomes in trials in which suicide was explicitly assessed as an outcome with clinical scales with established psychometric properties. Risk of bias was assessed with the Cochrane risk-of-bias tool (version 2)., Findings: Of the 469 randomised trials we identified in which a psychological intervention was compared with an inactive control in people with depression, 251 excluded people judged at risk of suicide. Any assessment of suicide was included in only 45 trials, 12 of which assessed suicidal ideation or risk as an outcome. These 12 trials included 3930 participants, 2795 (71%) of whom were female and 1135 (29%) of whom were male; data for age and ethnicity were not consistently reported. Psychological interventions for depression were associated with a small reduction in suicidal ideation and risk in 11 trials (one trial reported only follow-up data) after the intervention (standardised mean difference -0·31 [95% CI -0·60 to -0·03]) but not at follow-up (-0·49 [-1·31 to 0·32]). Suicide-related adverse events were reported in 25 trials, and suicide-related serious adverse events (eg, suicide attempts, deaths by suicide) were reported in 13 trials. Heterogeneity was substantial across all analyses, and prediction intervals crossed zero., Interpretation: Trials of psychological interventions for depression rarely report assessments of suicide. Psychological interventions might reduce suicidal ideation in patients with depression, but more randomised controlled trials are required to clarify this effect. Monitoring and reporting of suicide-related adverse events should be improved in trials of psychological interventions for depression, and future trials should incorporate outcomes related to suicidal thoughts or behaviours., Funding: None., Translation: For the Spanish translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests We declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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38. A network perspective on posttraumatic stress disorder and comorbid borderline personality disorder symptoms.
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Snoek A, Edens R, van Ballegooijen W, Dekker J, Beekman AT, and Thomaes K
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Comorbidity, Reproducibility of Results, Borderline Personality Disorder epidemiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Comorbidity between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and borderline personality disorder (BPD) is surrounded by diagnostic controversy and although various effective treatments exist, dropout and nonresponse are high. Objective: By estimating the network structure of comorbid PTSD and BPD symptoms, the current study illustrates how the network perspective offers tools to tackle these challenges. Method: The sample comprised of 154 patients with a PTSD diagnosis and BPD symptoms, assessed by clinician-administered interviews. A regularised partial correlation network was estimated using the GLASSO algorithm in R. Central symptoms and bridge symptoms were identified. The reliability and accuracy of network parameters were determined through bootstrapping analyses. Results: PTSD and BPD symptoms largely clustered into separate communities. Intrusive memories, physiological cue reactivity and loss of interest were the most central symptoms, whereas amnesia and suicidal behaviour were least central. Conclusions: Present findings suggest that PTSD and BPD are two distinct, albeit weakly connected disorders. Treatment of the most central symptoms could lead to an overall deactivation of the network, while isolated symptoms would need more specific attention during therapy. Further experimental, longitudinal research is needed to confirm these hypotheses. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03833453.
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- 2024
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39. A Proof of Concept Study on Individual Trends in Suicidal Ideation: An Ecological Momentary Assessment Study of 5 Patients Over Three Months.
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Nuij C, van Ballegooijen W, Smit AC, de Beurs D, de Winter RFP, O'Connor RC, Kerkhof A, Smit JH, and Riper H
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Background: Suicidal ideation (SI) is a significant and long-lasting mental health problem, with a third of individuals still experiencing SI after two years. To date, most Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) studies of SI have assessed its day-to-day course over one to four consecutive weeks and found no consistent trends in average SI severity over time., Aim: The current proof of concept study assessed daily fluctuations of SI over a time span of 3 to 6 months to explore whether individual trends in SI severity could be detected, and if so, if the trajectory of changes were gradual or sudden. The secondary aim was to explore whether changes in SI severity could be detected at an early stage., Method: Five adult outpatients with depression and SI used an EMA app on their smartphone in addition to their regular treatment for 3 to 6 months, where SI was assessed 3 times a day. To detect trends in SI for each patient, three models were tested: a null model, a gradual change model and a sudden change model. To detect changes in SI before a new plateau was reached, Early Warning Signals and Exponentially Weighted Moving Average control charts were used., Results: In each patient, average SI severity had a unique trajectory of sudden and/or gradual changes. Additionally, in some patients, increases in both sudden and gradual SI could be detected at an early stage., Conclusions: The study presents a first indication of unique individual trends in SI severity over a 3 to 6 months period. Though replication in a larger sample is needed to test how well results generalize, a first proof-of-concept is provided that both sudden and gradual changes in SI severity may be detectable at an early stage using the dynamics of time-series data., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interests., (© Person-Oriented Research.)
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- 2023
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40. Effects of digital cognitive behavioral therapy for depression on suicidal thoughts and behavior: Protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis of individual participant data.
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Sander LB, Beisemann M, Karyotaki E, van Ballegooijen W, Cuijpers P, Teismann T, Doebler P, Domhardt M, Baumeister H, and Büscher R
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- Adult, Adolescent, Humans, Depression therapy, Systematic Reviews as Topic, Meta-Analysis as Topic, Suicidal Ideation, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy methods
- Abstract
Introduction: Digital cognitive behavioral therapy (i-CBT) interventions for the treatment of depression have been extensively studied and shown to be effective in the reduction of depressive symptoms. However, little is known about their effects on suicidal thoughts and behaviors (STB). Information on the impact of digital interventions on STB are essential for patients' safety because most digital interventions are self-help interventions without direct support options in case of a suicidal crisis. Therefore, we aim to conduct a meta-analysis of individual participant data (IPDMA) to investigate the effects of i-CBT interventions for depression on STB and to explore potential effect moderators., Methods: Data will be retrieved from an established and annually updated IPD database of randomized controlled trials investigating the effectiveness of i-CBT interventions for depression in adults and adolescents. We will conduct a one-stage and a two-stage IPDMA on the effects of these interventions on STB. All types of control conditions are eligible. STB can be measured using specific scales (e.g., Beck scale suicide, BSS) or single items from depression scales (e.g., item 9 of the PHQ-9) or standardized clinical interviews. Multilevel linear regression will be used for specific scales, and multilevel logistic regression will be used for treatment response or deterioration, operationalized as a change in score by at least one quartile from baseline. Exploratory moderator analyses will be conducted at participant, study, and intervention level. Two independent reviewers will assess the risk of bias using the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool 2., Conclusion: This IPDMA will harness the available data to assess the effects (response and deterioration) of i-CBT interventions for depression interventions on STB. Information about changes in STB is essential to estimate patients' safety when engaging in digital treatment formats., Trial Registration: We will pre-register this study with the open science framework after article acceptance to ensure consistency between online registration and the published trial protocol., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Sander et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2023
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41. Which psychotherapy is most effective and acceptable in the treatment of adults with a (sub)clinical borderline personality disorder? A systematic review and network meta-analysis.
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Setkowski K, Palantza C, van Ballegooijen W, Gilissen R, Oud M, Cristea IA, Noma H, Furukawa TA, Arntz A, van Balkom AJLM, and Cuijpers P
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- Adult, Humans, Network Meta-Analysis, Psychotherapy, Suicide, Attempted, Suicidal Ideation, Treatment Outcome, Borderline Personality Disorder therapy, Borderline Personality Disorder diagnosis
- Abstract
A broad range of psychotherapies have been proposed and evaluated in the treatment of borderline personality disorder (BPD), but the question which specific type of psychotherapy is most effective remains unanswered. In this study, two network meta-analyses (NMAs) were conducted investigating the comparative effectiveness of psychotherapies on (1) BPD severity and (2) suicidal behaviour (combined rate). Study drop-out was included as a secondary outcome. Six databases were searched until 21 January 2022, including RCTs on the efficacy of any psychotherapy in adults (⩾18 years) with a diagnosis of (sub)clinical BPD. Data were extracted using a predefined table format. PROSPERO ID:CRD42020175411. In our study, a total of 43 studies ( N = 3273) were included. We found significant differences between several active comparisons in the treatment of (sub)clinical BPD, however, these findings were based on very few trials and should therefore be interpreted with caution. Some therapies were more efficacious compared to GT or TAU. Furthermore, some treatments more than halved the risk of attempted suicide and committed suicide (combined rate), reporting RRs around 0.5 or lower, however, these RRs were not statistically significantly better compared to other therapies or to TAU. Study drop-out significantly differed between some treatments. In conclusion, no single treatment seems to be the best choice to treat people with BPD compared to other treatments. Nevertheless, psychotherapies for BPD are perceived as first-line treatments, and should therefore be investigated further on their long-term effectiveness, preferably in head-to-head trials. DBT was the best connected treatment, providing solid evidence of its effectiveness.
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- 2023
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42. Editorial: Digital suicide prevention.
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Sander LB, Spangenberg L, La Sala L, and Van Ballegooijen W
- Abstract
Competing Interests: LBS was received research grants from the German Research Foundation, the German Joint Federal Committee innovation funds and the German Academic Exchange Service and received personal fees from psychotherapy training institutes, clinic providers and the German pension fund, which were not related to the submitted work. LS has received research grants from the German Research Foundation. LLS is funded by a Postdoctoral Fellowship from Suicide Prevention Australia. The remaining author declares that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
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- 2023
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43. The feasibility of using smartphone apps as treatment components for depressed suicidal outpatients.
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Nuij C, van Ballegooijen W, de Beurs D, de Winter RFP, Gilissen R, O'Connor RC, Smit JH, Kerkhof A, and Riper H
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Mental health smartphone apps could increase the safety and self-management of patients at risk of suicide, but it is still unclear whether it is feasible to integrate such apps into routine mental healthcare. This study reports on the feasibility of using a safety planning app (BackUp) and a self-monitoring app (mEMA) as components of the routine treatment of depressed outpatients with suicidal ideation. Clinicians were trained in working with both of the apps, and they invited their eligible patients with suicidal ideation for study participation. Patients used the apps for 3 months and discussed these with their clinician during treatment. Patients completed assessments at baseline (T
0 ), 4 weeks (T1 ) and post-test (T2 , 12 weeks after baseline). Both patients and clinicians also participated in telephone interviews. Feasibility was assessed in terms of usability (score > 70 on System Usability Scale, SUS), acceptability (score > 20 on Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-8, CSQ-8), and uptake (sufficient rates of component completion and app usage in treatment). The sample included 17 adult outpatients (52.9% male, age range 20-50 years) diagnosed with a depressive disorder and suicidal ideation at baseline. BackUp was rated by patients at above the cut-off scores for usability (SUS mean score at T1 75.63 and at T2 77.71) and acceptability (CSQ-8 mean score at T1 23.42 and at T2 23.50). mEMA was similarly rated (SUS mean score at T1 75.83 and at T2 76.25; CSQ-8 mean score at T1 23.92 and at T2 22.75). Telephone interviews with patients and clinicians confirmed the usability and acceptability. The uptake criteria were not met. Our findings suggest that mobile safety planning and mobile self-monitoring can be considered acceptable and usable as treatment components for depressed suicidal outpatients, but the integration of apps into routine treatment needs to be further explored., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Nuij, van Ballegooijen, de Beurs, de Winter, Gilissen, O’Connor, Smit, Kerkhof and Riper.)- Published
- 2022
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44. A Web-Based Stress Management Intervention for University Students in Indonesia (Rileks): Feasibility Study Using a Pretest-Posttest Design.
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Juniar D, van Ballegooijen W, Schulte M, van Schaik A, Passchier J, Heber E, Lehr D, Sadarjoen SS, and Riper H
- Abstract
Background: University students are susceptible to excessive stress. A web-based stress management intervention holds promise to improve stress but is still at a novel stage in Indonesia., Objective: The aim of this paper was to report the feasibility of the intervention we developed-Rileks-among university students in Indonesia in terms of acceptability and usability, and to propose recommendations for future improvements., Methods: A single-group pretest and posttest design was used. Participants with scores of 15 or higher on the stress subscale of the 42-item Depression Anxiety Stress Scales were given access to the intervention (N=68). The main outcome measures were the 8-item Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8) score, the System Usability Scale (SUS) score, and intervention uptake. Participants' experience in each session was evaluated using closed- and open-ended questions for future improvements. Descriptive statistics were used to examine primary outcome and qualitative session evaluations. Participants' responses to each topic of the open questions were summarized., Results: The intervention was evaluated as being satisfactory (CSQ-8 mean score 21.89, SD 8.72; range 8-32). However, the intervention's usability was still below expectation (SUS mean score 62.8, SD 14.74; range 0-100). The core modules were completed by 10 out of 68 participants (15%), and the study dropout rate was 63% (43/68) at postassessment. In general, the module content was rated positively, with some notes for improvement covering content and technical aspects., Conclusions: This study indicates that Rileks is potentially feasible for Indonesian university students. In order to be optimally applied in such a context and before scaling up web-based interventions in Indonesia, in general, further development and refinement are needed., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): RR2-10.2196/11493., (©Dilfa Juniar, Wouter van Ballegooijen, Mieke Schulte, Anneke van Schaik, Jan Passchier, Elena Heber, Dirk Lehr, Sawitri Supardi Sadarjoen, Heleen Riper. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 19.07.2022.)
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- 2022
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45. Can Outcomes of a Chat-Based Suicide Prevention Helpline Be Improved by Training Counselors in Motivational Interviewing? A Non-randomized Controlled Trial.
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Janssen W, van Raak J, van der Lucht Y, van Ballegooijen W, and Mérelle S
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Objective: To examine whether the outcomes of a chat-based suicide-prevention helpline could be improved by training counselors in motivational interviewing (MI)., Methods: In a pre- and post-test design, visitors of a chat-based suicide prevention helpline received either the Five-Phase Model (treatment as usual [TAU]) or MI. They completed a pre- and post-chat questionnaire on several suicide-related risk factors. Linear mixed modeling was used to estimate the effect of the condition. Furthermore, the treatment proficiency of newly trained counselors was assessed using MI-Scope., Results: A total of 756 visitors and 55 counselors were included in this study. The visitors showed an improvement in suicidal ideation and psychological risk factors after a chat conversation. However, there were no significant differences between the MI and TAU conditions (β = 0.03, 95% CI [-0.23-0.30], p = 0.80). The treatment integrity indices showed that the counselors mostly used MI-consistent techniques but were unable to strategically employ these techniques to evoke enough change talk., Conclusions: MI and TAU led to comparable outcomes in a chat-based suicide prevention helpline. The effectiveness of MI might improve by intensifying or improving the training of counselors, keeping the process of engaging more concise or offering visitors multiple sessions of MI., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Janssen, Raak, Lucht, Ballegooijen and Mérelle.)
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- 2022
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46. The temporal relationships between defeat, entrapment and suicidal ideation: ecological momentary assessment study.
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van Ballegooijen W, Littlewood DL, Nielsen E, Kapur N, and Gooding P
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Background: Psychological models of suicidal experiences are largely based on cross-sectional or long-term prospective data with follow-up intervals typically greater than 1 year. Recent time-series analyses suggest that these models may not account for fluctuations in suicidal thinking that occur within a period of hours and/or days., Aims: We explored whether previously posited causal relationships between defeat, entrapment and suicidal ideation accounted for temporal associations between these experiences at small time intervals from 3 to 12 h., Method: Participants ( N = 51) completed an ecological momentary assessment (EMA) study, comprising repeated assessments at semi-random time points up to six times per day for 1 week, resulting in 1852 completed questionnaires. Multilevel vector autoregression was used to calculate temporal associations between variables at different time intervals (i.e. 3 to 12 h between measurements)., Results: The results showed that entrapment severity was temporally associated with current and later suicidal ideation, consistently over these time intervals. Furthermore, entrapment had two-way temporal associations with defeat and suicidal ideation at time intervals of approximately 3 h. The residual and contemporaneous network revealed significant associations between all variables, of which the association between entrapment and defeat was the strongest., Conclusions: Although entrapment is key in the pathways leading to suicidal ideation over time periods of months, our results suggest that entrapment may also account for the emergence of suicidal thoughts across time periods spanning a few hours.
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- 2022
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47. Authors' reply.
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Nuij C, van Ballegooijen W, Derek de B, Juniar D, Erlangsen A, Portzky G, O'Connor RC, Johannes HS, Kerkhof A, and Heleen R
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- 2022
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48. Safety planning-type interventions for suicide prevention: meta-analysis.
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Nuij C, van Ballegooijen W, de Beurs D, Juniar D, Erlangsen A, Portzky G, O'Connor RC, Smit JH, Kerkhof A, and Riper H
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- Humans, Suicidal Ideation, Suicide Prevention
- Abstract
Background: Safety planning-type interventions (SPTIs) for patients at risk of suicide are often used in clinical practice, but it is unclear whether these interventions are effective., Aims: This article reports on a meta-analysis of studies that have evaluated the effectiveness of SPTIs in reducing suicidal behaviour and ideation., Method: We searched Medline, EMBASE, PsycINFO, Web of Science and Scopus from their inception to 9 December 2019, for studies that compared an SPTI with a control condition and had suicidal behaviour or ideation as outcomes. Two researchers independently extracted the data. To assess suicidal behaviour, we used a random-effects model of relative risk based on a pooled measure of suicidal behaviour. For suicidal ideation, we calculated effect sizes with Hedges' g. The study was registered at PROSPERO (registration number CRD42020129185)., Results: Of 1816 unique abstracts screened, 6 studies with 3536 participants were eligible for analysis. The relative risk of suicidal behaviour among patients who received an SPTI compared with control was 0.570 (95% CI 0.408-0.795, P = 0.001; number needed to treat, 16). No significant effect was found for suicidal ideation., Conclusions: To our knowledge, this is the first study to report a meta-analysis on SPTIs for suicide prevention. Results support the use of SPTIs to help preventing suicidal behaviour and the inclusion of SPTIs in clinical guidelines for suicide prevention. We found no evidence for an effect of SPTIs on suicidal ideation, and other interventions may be needed for this purpose.
- Published
- 2021
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49. Discovering different profiles in the dynamics of depression based on real-time monitoring of mood: a first exploration.
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van Genugten CR, Schuurmans J, van Ballegooijen W, Hoogendoorn AW, Smit JH, and Riper H
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Background: Although depression is typically characterized by a persistent depressed mood, mood dynamics do seem to vary across a depressed population. Heterogeneity of mood variability (magnitude of changes) and emotional inertia (speed at which mood shifts) is seen in clinical practice. However, studies investigating the heterogeneity of these mood dynamics are still scarce. The aim of the present study is to explore different distinctive profiles in real-time monitored mood dynamics among depressed persons., Methods: After completing baseline measures, mildly-to-moderately depressed persons ( n = 37) were prompted to rate their current mood (1-10 scale) on their smartphones, 3 times a day for 7 consecutive days. Latent profile analyses were applied to identify profiles based on average mood, variability of mood and emotional inertia as reported by the participants., Results: Two profiles were identified in this sample. The overwhelming majority of the sample belonged to profile 1 ( n = 31). Persons in profile 1 were characterized by a mood just above the cutoff for positive mood (M = 6.27), with smaller mood shifts (lower variability [SD = 1.05]) than those in profile 2 ( n = 6), who displayed an overall negative mood (M = 4.72) and larger mood shifts (higher variability [SD = 1.95]) but at similar speed (emotional inertia) (AC = 0.19, AC = 0.26, respectively)., Conclusions: The present study provides preliminary indications for patterns of average mood and mood variability, but not emotional inertia, among mildly-to-moderately depressed persons., Competing Interests: None., (© 2021 The Authors.)
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- 2021
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50. Transdiagnostic Internet Intervention for Indonesian University Students With Depression and Anxiety: Evaluation of Feasibility and Acceptability.
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Rahmadiana M, Karyotaki E, Schulte M, Ebert DD, Passchier J, Cuijpers P, Berger T, van Ballegooijen W, Wimbarti S, and Riper H
- Abstract
Background: University students with depression and anxiety do not easily receive or seek treatment; therefore, internet-based interventions have been suggested to be a promising way to improve treatment accessibility and availability. However, it has not been examined whether a guided, culturally adapted, transdiagnostic, internet-based intervention is effective for treating symptoms of depression, anxiety, or both among university students in Indonesia., Objective: This study aims to investigate the feasibility (acceptability and satisfaction, usability, and uptake) of a guided, culturally adapted, transdiagnostic, internet-based intervention among university students with symptoms of depression, anxiety, or both in Indonesia., Methods: Students from Universitas Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta, Indonesia, were screened for symptoms of depression, anxiety, or both, and filled online informed consent, demographic questionnaires, and a quality of life measure at pretreatment assessment (T0). Subsequently, the participants started the intervention. Seven weeks after T0, the primary outcomes of this feasibility study were analyzed at posttreatment assessment (T1) using the 8-item Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8) and the System Usability Scale (SUS). Mean and SDs for the CSQ-8 and SUS were calculated to examine feasibility. Within-group secondary outcomes (depression, anxiety, and quality of life) were inspected for outliers and normal distribution. Paired-sample t tests were used to investigate differences between time points of secondary outcomes. A mixed-method approach of quantitative and qualitative analyses was adopted. Both the primary and secondary outcomes were additionally explored with an individual semistructured interview and synthesized descriptively., Results: A total of 50 participants completed the intervention. We found a moderate to high level of satisfaction and acceptability, a slightly below-average level of desirable usability (≥70), and an adherence rate of 52% which was higher than expected given the novelty of the intervention. Results for the secondary outcomes indicated a decrease in depression and anxiety. For depression, the overall mean difference between the 2 time points for depression was 3.92 (95% CI 2.75-5.1; Hedges g 1.15; P<.001). For anxiety, the overall mean difference between the 2 time points was 3.34 (95% CI 2.06-4.61; Hedges g 1.02; P<.001). Further, a moderate effect in improving quality of life was found (g=0.50). Overall, participants were positive about the online intervention and ECoaches (online guidance), and they found the intervention to be culturally appropriate., Conclusions: A culturally adapted, transdiagnostic, internet-based intervention appears to be acceptable and feasible for reducing symptoms of depression, anxiety, or both, and increasing quality of life in university students in Indonesia. Future studies should include a randomized controlled trial to assess the effectiveness of such interventions as they may supplement existing counseling services in universities, reduce the treatment costs, and maximize treatment accessibility in low-resourced settings., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): RR2-10.1016/j.invent.2018.11.002., (©Metta Rahmadiana, Eirini Karyotaki, Mieke Schulte, David Daniel Ebert, Jan Passchier, Pim Cuijpers, Thomas Berger, Wouter van Ballegooijen, Supra Wimbarti, Heleen Riper. Originally published in JMIR Mental Health (http://mental.jmir.org), 05.03.2021.)
- Published
- 2021
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