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. 2023 Oct 5;2023(10):CD013456. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013456.pub2

Littleton 2016.

Study characteristics
Methods Study design: randomised controlled trial
Study grouping: parallel group
Duration of study: May 2012 to August 2014
Ethics approvals: approval from 4 IRBs at the universities and colleges where recruitment took place
Location of study: 4 US universities and community colleges, including East Carolina
Randomisation method: participants were randomised to the interactive programme or psychoeducational website based on a computerised coin flip.
Participants Baseline characteristics
CBT (CBT‐online)
  • Participants (at randomisation): 46

  • Gender: 100% female participants

  • Age: not given

  • Ethnicity: 41.3% white, 21.7% Black, 38.3% other

  • Disability: not given

  • Time since trauma: not given

  • Income: not given

  • Education (% high school, college or apprentice, university or years of education): all college students

  • Employment: not given

  • Sexual violence in adulthood: 100%

  • Comorbid conditions: not given

  • Baseline PTSD, M (SD): 23.7 (6.5)

  • Partnered: not given

  • Randomised (N): 46

  • Completed post‐treatment assessment (N): 26

  • Dropped out or removed prior to analysis (N): 24

  • Numbers analysed at final applicable time point (N): 22

  • Number of sessions: not given

  • Treatment completion: 26 (57%)


Minimal intervention (psychoeducation website)
  • Participants (select at randomisation if available): 41

  • Gender: 100% female participants

  • Age: not given

  • Ethnicity: 51.2% white, 29.3% Black, 14.6% other

  • Disability: not given

  • Time since trauma: not given

  • Income: not given

  • Education (% high school, college or apprentice, university or years of education): all college students

  • Employment: not given

  • Sexual violence in adulthood: 100%

  • Comorbid conditions: not given

  • Baseline PTSD, M (SD): 23 (7.3)

  • Partnered: not given

  • Randomised (N): 41

  • Completed post‐treatment assessment (N): 29

  • Dropped out or removed prior to analysis (N): 20

  • Numbers analysed at final applicable time point (N): 21

  • Number of sessions: not given

  • Treatment completion: 29 (71%)


Overall
  • Participants (at randomisation): 87

  • Gender: 100% female participants

  • Age, M (range): 22 years (18 years to 42 years)

  • Ethnicity: 46% white, 25.3% Black, 20.7% other

  • Disability: not given

  • Time since trauma, M: < 4 years

  • Income: not given

  • Education (% high school, college or apprentice, university or years of education): all college students

  • Employment: not given

  • Sexual violence in adulthood: 100%

  • Comorbid conditions: 56.2%

  • Baseline PTSD: not given

  • Partnered: not given

  • Approached (N): 150

  • Ineligible (N): 60

  • Declined (N): 4

  • Other (N): 1

  • Randomised (N): 87

  • Completed post‐treatment assessment (N): 55

  • Dropped out or removed prior to analysis (N): 44

  • Numbers analysed at final applicable time point (N): 43


Inclusion criteria
  • Participants had to have experienced a completed rape since the age of 14 years.

  • Participants had to have a PTSD diagnosis determined using the PSS‐I (Foa 1993).

  • Regular access to a computer and a telephone number at which they could be reliably reached

  • Currently a student enrolled at one of the universities involved in the study


Exclusion criteria
  • Currently receiving psychotherapy

  • Lack of stability on psychotropic medication (not been on current medication and dosage for at least 3 months)

  • Active suicidality as determined by interview utilising the Scale for Suicidal Ideation (Beck 1979)

  • Meeting DSM‐IV criteria for current substance dependence assessed with substance use disorder module of Structured Clinical Interview for the DSM‐IV

  • Too acutely distressed to participate


Pretreatment: none identified, with the exception that women assigned to the interactive programme were more likely to report that the perpetrator used severe force
Interventions Intervention characteristics
CBT (online)
  • Planned number of intervention sessions: 9

  • Mode of delivery (face‐to‐face, online, video, telephone, blend, with explanation): online with feedback from therapist on exercises

  • Format (group, individual, blend): individual

  • Therapist qualifications and training appropriate (yes, no, unclear, with explanation): unclear, study staff are referred to as doctoral clinical psychology students or postdoctoral fellows, but training not specified

  • Research allegiance or conflict of interest (yes, no, unclear, with explanation): unclear, but presume they have developed the online programme

  • Treatment fidelity (yes, no, unclear, with explanation): yes, external raters reviewed therapeutic feedback provided to participants, which was "uniformly high", although unclear who they are or against what criteria

  • Intervention aim and theoretical basis: Survivor to Thriver Program consists of sequential modules, focusing on psychoeducation in modules 1 to 3; modules 4 and 5 introduce the cognitive model, teaching participants to identify distorted and unhelpful thoughts; the third phase focused on using a number of CBT techniques to address specific concerns among women following sexual assault.

  • Duration of intervention: 14 weeks


Minimal intervention (psychoeducation website)
  • Planned number of intervention sessions: 3; identical to Sessions 1 to 3 in other arm

  • Mode of delivery (face‐to‐face, online, video, telephone, blend, with explanation): online

  • Format (group, individual, blend): individual

  • Therapist qualifications and training appropriate: N/A

  • Research allegiance or conflict of interest: N/A

  • Treatment fidelity: N/A

  • Intervention aim and theoretical basis: the psychoeducational website contained the written content of the first 3 modules of the interactive programme, including the symptoms of PTSD, information about relaxing and grounding and information about healthy coping strategies.

  • Duration of intervention: 14 weeks

Outcomes PTSD
  • Outcome type: continuous outcome

  • Scale used: PSS‐I

  • Direction: lower is better

  • Score range: 0 to 51

  • Data value: endpoint, 3 months


Depression
  • Outcome type: continuous outcome

  • Scale used: CES‐D

  • Direction: lower is better

  • Score range: 0 to 60

  • Data value: endpoint, 3 months


Anxiety
  • Outcome type: continuous outcome

  • Scale used: Four‐Dimensional Anxiety Scale

  • Direction: lower is better

  • Score range: 35 to 175

  • Data value: endpoint, 3 months


Adverse events
  • Outcome type: continuous outcome

  • Notes: adverse events – 2 in interactive programme and 1 in psychoeducational arm had increased depressive symptoms; 1 participant in interactive programme had increased anxiety at follow‐up.


Treatment dropout
  • Outcome type: dichotomous outcome

Identification Sponsorship source: the research was supported by funding from the NIMH grant number 1R34MH085118.
Country: USA
Setting: university students with rape‐related PTSD; online therapy
Authors name: Heather Littleton
Institution: East Carolina University
Email: hlittlet@uccs.edu
Year: 2017
Notes Numbers in population characteristics are at randomisation. Number approached less ineligible is out by 1, so we added 1 to the 'Other' category.
Included in meta‐analysis