Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy Staff Publications

Publication Date

9-1-2023

Journal

Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review

DOI

10.1007/s10567-023-00439-2

PMID

37405675

PMCID

PMC10465687

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

7-5-2023

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Published Open-Access

yes

Keywords

Adolescent, Humans, Child, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, Treatment Outcome, Mental Health Services, OCD, Youth, Children, CBT, ERP, Staged care

Abstract

Childhood obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is among the most prevalent and disabling mental health conditions affecting children and adolescents. Although the distress and burden associated with childhood OCD are well documented and empirically supported treatments are available, there remains an unacceptable "treatment gap" and "quality gap" in the provision of services for youth suffering from OCD. The treatment gap represents the large number of children who never receive mental health services for OCD, while the quality gap refers to the children and young people who do access services, but do not receive evidence-based, cognitive behavioural therapy with exposure and response prevention (CBT-ERP). We propose a novel staged-care model of CBT-ERP that aims to improve the treatment access to high-quality CBT-ERP, as well as enhance the treatment outcomes for youth. In staged care, patients receive hierarchically arranged service packages that vary according to the intensity, duration, and mix of treatment options, with provision of care from prevention, early intervention, through to first and second-line treatments. Based on a comprehensive review of the literature on treatment outcomes and predictors of treatments response, we propose a preliminary staging algorithm to determine the level of clinical care, informed by three key determinants: severity of illness, comorbidity, and prior treatment history. The proposed clinical staging model for paediatric OCD prioritises high-quality care for children at all stages and levels of illness, utilising empirically supported CBT-ERP, across multiple modalities, combined with evidence-informed, clinical decision-making heuristics. While informed by evidence, the proposed staging model requires empirical validation before it is ready for prime time.

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