An analysis of integrated health care for Internet Use Disorders in adolescents and adults
An analysis of integrated health care for Internet Use Disorders in adolescents and adults
Author(s): Katajun LINDENBERG, Carolin SZÁSZ-JANOCHA, Sophie SCHOENMAEKERS, Ulrich Wehrmann, Eva VonderlinSubject(s): Behaviorism, Evaluation research, Substance abuse and addiction, Health and medicine and law, ICT Information and Communications Technologies
Published by: Akadémiai Kiadó
Keywords: integrated health care; mental health; treatment; Internet addiction; Internet Gaming Disorder; stepped-care;
Summary/Abstract: Although first treatment approaches for Internet Use Disorders (IUDs) have proven to be effective, health care utilization remained low. New service models focus on integrated health care systems, which facilitate access and reduce burdens of health care utilization, and stepped-care interventions, which efficiently provide individualized therapy. Methods: An integrated health care approach for IUD intended to (a) be easily accessible and comprehensive, (b) cover a variety of comorbid syndromes, and (c) take heterogeneous levels of impairment into account was investigated in a one-armed prospective intervention study on n = 81 patients, who were treated from 2012 to 2016. Results: First, patients showed significant improvement in Compulsive Internet Use over time, as measured by hierarchical linear modeling. Effect sizes of outcome change from baseline to 6-month followup ranged from d = 0.48 to d = 1.46. Second, differential effects were found depending on patients’ compliance, demonstrating that high compliance resulted in significantly higher rates of change. Third, patients referred to minimal interventions did not differ significantly in amount of change from patients referred to intensive psychotherapy. Discussion: Tailored interventions result in higher efficiency through optimized resource allocation and equal amounts of symptom change in all treatment conditions. Moreover, comprehensive, low-threshold interventions seem to increase health service utilization.
Journal: Journal of Behavioral Addictions
- Issue Year: 6/2017
- Issue No: 4
- Page Range: 579-592
- Page Count: 14
- Language: English