Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-wq484 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T14:46:48.897Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Simple or complex? A case study of physical and mental health co-morbidity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 November 2017

Sophie D. Bennett*
Affiliation:
University College London, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH
Isobel Heyman
Affiliation:
University College London, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, Great Ormond Street, London WC1N 3JH
Sophia Varadkar
Affiliation:
University College London, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, Great Ormond Street, London WC1N 3JH
Anna E. Coughtrey
Affiliation:
University College London, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, Great Ormond Street, London WC1N 3JH
Roz Shafran
Affiliation:
University College London, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH
*
Author for correspondence: Sophie Bennett, University College London, Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1EH. (E-mail: sophie.bennett.10@ucl.ac.uk)
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

People with epilepsy are significantly more likely to have a mental health disorder than those without a chronic illness. The reasons for this are multiple but may include the mental health difficulties being perceived as complex due to the presence of a chronic illness. In part due to the apparent complexity of the co-occurring physical and mental illness, many are not offered evidence-based treatment (EBT) for the mental health disorder. There is little guidance to inform clinicians about the interventions to use to treat mental health disorders in people with epilepsy. The present paper reports a case of treatment for depression using a standard EBT in a young person with epilepsy. The patient also had clinically significant symptoms of anxiety and an eating disorder and would be considered ‘complex’ according to standard criteria. The intervention, however, was relatively simple and was delivered as guided self-help via 10 weekly telephone calls of approximately 30 minutes duration, and two follow-up calls at one month and three months post-intervention. Self-report and parent-report questionnaire measures were completed before and after the intervention, and at both follow-up time points. A blind-rated online diagnostic interview measure was also completed before and after the intervention. The young person and her family also completed a qualitative interview of their experiences of the intervention. This simple intervention was effective in working towards the client's goals, although pre–post measurement on standard measures was variable. This interesting case raises questions about whether patients with mental and physical comorbidities are complex, or just perceived as complex.

Type
Special Issue: Complexity within Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
Copyright
Copyright © British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies 2017 

Introduction

Psychological interventions for mental health disorders have consistently demonstrated efficacy in hundreds of randomized controlled trials; a recent overview of meta-analyses found a mean effect size of 0.58 (Huhn et al. Reference Huhn, Tardy, Spineli, Kissling, Förstl and Pitschel-Walz2014). Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), in particular, has been shown to be efficacious for the treatment of anxiety disorders and eating disorders (Hofmann et al. Reference Hofmann, Asnaani, Vonk, Sawyer and Fang2012). As a result, CBT is cited by NICE guidelines as the first-line treatment of choice for both adults and children with anxiety disorders and depression (e.g. NICE, 2005, 2009, 2011). Yet many people with mental health disorders do not receive evidence-based intervention (Prince et al. Reference Prince, Patel, Saxena, Maj, Maselko, Phillips and Rahman2007). The reasons for this are multiple, but may include clinicians’ beliefs that patients in clinical practice have more severe and complex problems than participants in research, due to strict exclusion criteria in clinical trials, as well as the belief that research trials are better resourced than clinical settings (Lilienfeld et al. Reference Lilienfeld, Ritschel, Lynn, Cautin and Latzman2013; Shafran et al. Reference Shafran, Clark, Fairburn, Arntz, Barlow and Ehlers2009; Stirman et al. Reference Stirman, Crits-Christoph and DeRubeis2004).

People with chronic health conditions typically fall into the category of those who are often excluded from clinical trials (cf. James et al. Reference James, James, Cowdrey, Soler and Weatherall2005) as they are considered to be complex. For example, the All Party Parliamentary Group for Complex Needs and Dual Diagnoses defines a person with complex needs as ‘someone with two or more needs affecting their physical, mental, social or financial wellbeing’ (Complex Needs and Dual Diagnosis APPG. 2014, June. Factsheet 1: Complex needs and dual diagnosis. Retrieved from http://www.turning-point.co.uk/media/636823/appg_factsheet_1_-_june_2014.pdf). They state that a person with both mental and physical health conditions would be considered to have complex needs.

People with chronic illness are at higher risk of developing mental health difficulties than those without. Mental health difficulties are associated with increased morbidity and mortality in those with physical illness (e.g. Katon, Reference Katon2003; Katon et al. Reference Katon, Von Korff, Lin, Simon, Ludman and Russo2004; Kovacs et al. Reference Kovacs, Mukerji, Drash and Iyengar1995; Lespérance et al. Reference Lespérance, Frasure-Smith, Talajic and Bourassa2002; Whooley et al. Reference Whooley, de Jonge, Vittinghoff, Otte, Moos and Carney2008). Those with chronic neurological conditions, such as epilepsy, are at particularly high risk, with rates up to 54.5% in community samples (see Tellez-Zenteno et al. Reference Tellez-Zenteno, Patten, Jetté, Williams and Wiebe2007, for review).

There are likely to be multiple pathways to the development of mental health difficulties in people with epilepsy and hence reasons for the increased prevalence. For example, in depression, a diathesis-stress model has been described, whereby ‘chronic stress exposure owing to the burden of epilepsy and learned helplessness due to the threat of recurrent seizures as unpredictable aversive events represent psychological risk factors’ for depression (Hoppe and Elger, Reference Hoppe and Elger2011). Some anti-epileptic drugs (AEDs) may have mood stabilising properties, whereas others are associated with increased risk of depression (Ettinger, Reference Ettinger2006), particularly if the patient has a history of psychiatric illness (Nadkarni and Devinsky, Reference Nadkarni and Devinsky2005). Shared underlying pathology may also play a role (Heyman et al 2015), particularly as epilepsy has been associated with an increased likelihood of developing a psychiatric disorder even prior to epilepsy diagnosis (e.g. Hesdorffer et al. Reference Hesdorffer, Ishihara, Mynepalli, Webb, Weil and Hauser2012). Not only may epilepsy be a risk factor for developing depression, but patients with depression also have a three to seven times greater risk of developing epilepsy, suggesting a bidirectional relationship between the two (Kanner, Reference Kanner2011). Additionally, there is an increased prevalence of neurodevelopmental disorders, such as autism spectrum disorders (Clarke et al. Reference Clarke, Roberts, Daraksan, Dupuis, McCabe and Wood2005), and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (Dunn and Austin, 2003), intellectual disabilities (Sillanpää, Reference Sillanpää2004) and specific learning difficulties (Fastenau et al. Reference Fastenau, Shen, Dunn and Austin2008) in people with epilepsy, which themselves may be risk factors for the development of mental health disorders (Heyman, 2015).

This ‘complex interplay between psychological, physical and social factors’, coupled with low detection rates, has led to a significant proportion of people with chronic illness not having their mental health needs met (Prince et al. Reference Prince, Patel, Saxena, Maj, Maselko, Phillips and Rahman2007), perhaps in part because they are considered ‘difficult to ascertain, diagnose, or treat’ (Complex Needs and Dual Diagnosis APPG, 2014). This is particularly the case for children and young people with chronic illnesses, including those with neurological conditions. For example, Ott and colleagues (2003) found that of 114 children with epilepsy, 61% had psychiatric diagnoses, but of these, only 33% had received treatment, despite regularly attending clinics for their epilepsy. This situation is not unique to neurological conditions; Katon and colleagues (2006) found that only 35% of young people with asthma and a co-morbid anxiety and/or depressive disorder (identified through screening interviews) were recognised by the medical system as having a mental health disorder. In those young people diagnosed with a co-morbid major depression, only 17% received four or more psychotherapy sessions. Most recently, the UK Children's Commissioner's Lightning review found that 60% of mental health conditions in the context of physical health problems go undetected and untreated, whilst the outcome of Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS) referrals was unknown for almost 80% of 4098 children and young people with emotional difficulties related to their physical conditions (Children's Commissioner, 2016). Whilst it is not known whether the primary reason for a lack of treatment is perceived complexity, research on interventions tailored specifically towards specific chronic illnesses (e.g. McGrady and Hood, Reference McGrady and Hood2013; Reigada et al. Reference Reigada, Benkov, Bruzzese, Hoogendoorn, Szigethy and Briggie2013) suggests that some consider that current evidence-based treatments (EBTs) are either not sufficient, or are not optimal for people with these chronic illnesses, despite the lack of evidence for this assertion.

But why might people assume such patients are complex, and therefore may not respond as well to treatment, simply because they have a chronic illness? As stated by Lau (Reference Lau2006) in consideration of cultural adaptations of EBTs, ‘although there is as yet limited evidence supporting the effectiveness of EBTs with minorities, evidence that they are less effective with minorities is likewise limited’. As with cultural adaptations, there has been extremely little research to date investigating treatment for mental health disorders in adults with chronic physical conditions (Hadert, Reference Hadert2013) and even fewer studies in children and young people with chronic physical conditions (Bennett et al. Reference Bennett, Shafran, Coughtrey, Walker and Heyman2015).

Lau and colleagues (Reference Lau2006) further suggest that ‘the first priority is to proceed with deployment to ensure minorities have access to evidence-based care and evaluate parity within inclusive effectiveness trials’. We agree with this sentiment and consider that before embarking on modification of an existing treatment, or even developing a new one, surely it should be determined whether ‘simple’ evidence-based CBT interventions are effective in this population. Adapting treatments may compromise their fidelity and therefore effectiveness, and could be wasteful of resources (Lau et al. Reference Lau2006). Given the proven efficacy of ‘simple’ CBT interventions in the treatment of mental health disorders in a wide range of populations and for a wide range of difficulties, ‘there is no logical reason why treatments known to be effective already . . . should not also be effective in the presence of chronic illness’ in children and young people (Cottrell, Reference Cottrell2015). It is therefore most parsimonious to start with these.

Yet, even if we can demonstrate efficacy of these interventions in a complex population, how do we address the second reason for the gap between research findings and clinical practice, namely, the capacity of clinical services? The prevalence of epilepsy alone is 0.97%, equivalent to 600,000 people in the UK. Assuming a prevalence of depression of 30–50% in this group (Kanner, Reference Kanner2003), of which large numbers do not have access to intervention, this is a significant unmet need. UK clinical practices are already stretched beyond capacity (Lousada et al. Reference Lousada, Weisz, Hudson and Swain2015). We need to provide simple, cost-effective interventions that can be widely disseminated.

One way of meeting a large unmet need for psychological therapy is through the use of self-help or guided self-help interventions (the latter involving varying degrees of input from a therapist). This both reduces the impact of stigma (as it is possible to access it without others knowing), and reduces the time burden associated with visiting a clinic. It is cost effective and is as efficacious as face-to-face therapy for the treatment of anxiety and depression (Cuijpers et al. Reference Cuijpers, Donker, van Straten, Li and Andersson2010). Guided self-help is now a recommended first-line treatment for mild to moderate anxiety and depression in adults (e.g. NICE, 2009a; NICE, 2011), as well as for adults with a chronic physical health problem (NICE, 2009b). NICE states that the evidence for this guideline was based on evidence from the Depression guidance, and that there is little evidence to conclude its efficacy in people with a chronic physical illness. It therefore calls for research investigating the efficacy of low-intensity interventions for depression in patients with a chronic physical health problem.

This paper reports on a case of a young person with depression and anxiety in the context of severe epilepsy. A short, simple telephone guided self-help CBT intervention was used. The case was evaluated through both quantitative measures and a qualitative interview.

Methods

Chloe (patient's name and identifying details have been changed to preserve anonymity) was a 17-year-old with epilepsy. This work was completed as part of a research study investigating the feasibility of routine screening and intervention for common mental health difficulties in children and young people with epilepsy.

Intervention

The intervention used in the research study was based on the Modular Approach to Therapy for Children with Anxiety, Depression, Trauma, or Conduct Problems (MATCH-ADTC) protocol (Chorpita and Weisz, Reference Chorpita and Weisz2009). MATCH-ADTC is a modular-based intervention, with larger modules for the treatment of anxiety, trauma, conduct problems and/or depression. Within these larger modules are 31 smaller stand-alone modules, for example on behavioural activation in the depression module, thought challenging in the anxiety module, or praise in the behaviour module. The modules correspond to the procedures used in the leading evidence-based psychological treatments that have been evaluated in over 322 randomized controlled trials. The three treatments are ‘Coping Cat’ for anxiety disorders, ‘Primary and Secondary Control Enhancement Training’ (PASCET) for depression, and Parent Training for disruptive conduct (Barkley et al. 1997; Kendall, Reference Kendall1990; Weisz et al. Reference Weisz, Thurber, Sweeney, Proffitt and LeGagnoux1997). Both Coping Cat and PASCET have been used in small studies of children with physical illnesses (Blocher et al. Reference Blocher, Fujikawa, Sung, Jackson and Jones2013; Szigethy et al. Reference Szigethy, Kenney, Carpenter, Hardy, Fairclough and Bousvaros2007). The use and order of the modules within therapy is guided by an algorithm.

MATCH-ADTC is designed to account for the high rates of co-morbidities in usual clinical practice and has been demonstrated to be superior to usual care in children with common mental health disorders (Weisz et al. Reference Weisz, Chorpita, Palinkas, Schoenwald, Miranda and Bearman2012). According to the protocol, the therapist focuses on the initial problem area identified as most important, based on measures and patient priorities. It is considered to represent true evidence-based practice in that the protocol combines research evidence, clinical judgement and patient values and preferences. Once a problem area has been selected (e.g. anxiety), an algorithm specifies a default sequence of modules and guides clinical judgement. However, the intervention is personalised so that if the default sequence cannot be implemented (e.g. due to low mood), then the sequence can be changed to address the immediate issue. Once that issue has been addressed, treatment for the original problem area is resumed.

This intervention seemed particularly suitable for our needs considering the high rates of co-morbidities or co-occurring mental health difficulties in our population of young people with epilepsy (Reilly et al. Reference Reilly, Atkinson, Das, Chin, Aylett and Burch2014). We wanted the intervention to maximize accessibility for an under-treated population and decided to implement a stepped-care approach, through offering MATCH-ADTC as a guided self-help intervention. Following this, we could refer onto higher intensity treatments if necessary. This is the first time that MATCH-ADTC has been used in a guided self-help format.

The intervention took the form of a ten-session guided self-help therapy based on the MATCH-ADTC protocol. One-month and three-month follow-up calls were also completed. Each telephone call involved setting an agenda, reviewing the homework, problem solving any difficulties, setting the next week's homework and summarising the session. As a guided self-help intervention, no new material was ‘taught’ during the sessions. Instead, the homework consisted of the therapist emailing a relevant strategy to the participant, which they would read, attempt to implement and then record the outcome. The purpose of the telephone calls was to problem-solve any difficulties in implementation and enhance motivation. The therapist was also able to use the MATCH algorithm to ensure that the correct module was being followed each week. The therapists (R.S. and S.B.) were both qualified clinical psychologists.

Measures

Measures were completed in line with the Children and Young People's Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (CYPIAPT) measurement protocol, to allow comparison to national data sets. Both pre–post measures and weekly measures were completed.

Diagnostic

The Development and Wellbeing Assessment (DAWBA; Goodman et al., Reference Goodman, Ford, Richards, Gatward and Meltzer2000) – a package of interviews, questionnaires and rating techniques designed to generate ICD-10 and DSM-5 psychiatric diagnoses on 5- to 17-year-olds. It takes 30–50 minutes to complete in a community sample. It is used widely in child and adolescent mental health services internationally and has been demonstrated to be acceptable to families attending child and adolescent mental health services (Last et al. Reference Last, Ford, Henley, Norman and Goodman2013). There are a variety of formats including computer-administered interviews that are available via the internet in a number of languages. The online version provides probabilities of a child meeting diagnostic criteria and can additionally be clinician rated for the presence or absence of diagnoses. It demonstrates good psychometric properties (Cohen's kappa = 74–99% for specific diagnoses when comparing rated DAWBA diagnoses and clinicians’ diagnoses).

Pre, post and follow-up measures

Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ; Goodman, 1997) the SDQ is a commonly used and psychometrically robust measure to identify emotional and behavioural symptoms. It consists of 25 items, divided into five scales (emotional symptoms, conduct problems, hyperactivity/inattention, peer relationship problems), in addition to an impact supplement which asks the respondent whether they think the young person has an emotional/behavioural problem, and if so asks about chronicity, distress, social impairment and burden to others. Scores on each subscale and the impact scale can be categorised into four ranges: close to average, slightly high, high, and very high. It can be completed by the parent if the child is younger than 11 years of age, or by the parent and young person if they are age 11 or older. It has demonstrated high sensitivity and specificity in predicting psychiatric diagnoses in children with chronic physical illness (Hysing et al. Reference Hysing, Elgen, Gillberg, Lie and Lundervold2007) and has been suggested for use as a ‘clinic-friendly’ screening tool for identifying mental health problems in children with epilepsy (Asato et al. Reference Asato, Doss and Plioplys2015).

Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale (RCADS; Chorpita et al. Reference Chorpita, Yim, Moffitt, Umemoto and Francis2000) – this is a well-validated 47-item parent or self-report questionnaire identifying symptoms of depression and anxiety in children and young people.

Paediatric Quality of Life (PedsQL; Varni et al. Reference Varni, Seid and Kurtin2001) – this is a 23-item well-validated parent or self-report measure of quality of life with four subscales, covering physical, emotional, social and school functioning.

Weekly measures

Symptom monitoring – ‘How are things? Depression’ – this is a weekly self-report questionnaire which identifies symptoms of depression. It is an 8-item scale, based on the depression subscale of the RCADS.

Goal Based Outcomes – Chloe identified three goals for treatment at the initial appointment. Progress towards the goals is rated on a scale of 1–10 in each session (where 1 is no progress towards goals, and 10 is goal is met).

Procedures

Participants were recruited from a related study investigating routine detection of mental health disorders in children and young people attending neurology clinics. All children/young people within the correct age range attending neurology clinics were sent information leaflets about the study prior to attending the clinic. When in clinic, they were approached by a research assistant, who invited the parents/carers, and young person where appropriate, to complete the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire online on a tablet computer within the clinic. Informed consent was given for the full study at this point. Those scoring above a pre-specified threshold (defined as the combination of raised symptom score: ≥14 out of a maximum of 40, which is a score in the ‘slightly raised’ range or higher, and raised impact score: ≥2 out of a maximum of 10 indicating a score in the ‘high’ range or above) were automatically invited by the system to progress to the full Development and Wellbeing Assessment, which was completed by the parent/carer and young person where appropriate at home. The DAWBA was blind rated by a clinician not involved in the study intervention.

Relevant background history

Chloe had severe intractable epilepsy, with multiple daily seizures. Due to the severity of the epilepsy, she had undergone surgery a year prior to our assessment, involving removal of the brain area that was thought to be the focal point of the seizures (the part of the brain from which the seizures arose). Whilst this carried significant risks, there was a high likelihood of Chloe becoming seizure free following the operation. Unfortunately, Chloe had experienced some seizures following the surgery, although these were far less frequent. One of these seizures led to Chloe falling suddenly and hurting herself.

All patients who are contemplating epilepsy surgery are offered neuropsychological and neuropsychiatric assessments prior to and after the surgery. The neuropsychiatrist was alerted to Chloe's deteriorating mood shortly following the surgery after her parents telephoned the service. Chloe had been feeling particularly low since the surgery, as it had not resulted in seizure freedom as she had hoped. Her parents reported that she was very upset and angry, although was reluctant to talk to them about her feelings. Chloe had told them that that she ‘might as well be dead’. She also had some difficulty sleeping, which can occur following neurosurgery. Chloe was therefore referred to her local CAMHS for review at this point.

Chloe and her parents were then offered a neuropsychiatric appointment 10 weeks post-operatively. Chloe and her parents both reported that she was unusually irritable, sensitive and distressed. She was tearful on most days of the week, and was sensitive to perceived injustices or criticisms. There was also some conflict between Chloe and her parents, as they adjusted to Chloe having far fewer seizures, whilst managing the uncertainty of possible seizures and Chloe's increasing independence as she moved towards adulthood. Chloe felt that her parents restricted her activities because of the concern that being out late or staying away from home could increase the risk of a seizure. Chloe wanted some suggestions for thinking about low mood and anxiety. At this point, the psychiatrist felt that it might be helpful for the family to have some joint sessions to discuss how to negotiate her independence in the context of the epilepsy. However, Chloe did not want ‘family therapy’ and the psychiatrist gave the family time to think about this and to contact them or community CAMHS if they did decide that they wanted referral for further input.

Assessment interview

The DAWBA rated the overall possibility of a disorder as ‘high’. Predicted probability of generalized anxiety and eating disorder were calculated at around 50%, and for obsessive compulsive disorder, depression and hyperactivity around 3%, although the clinician rating suggested that she did not meet full diagnostic criteria for any disorder. The open-ended text comments suggested that Chloe was experiencing some anxiety, low mood and had worries regarding her eating, which appeared to have been exacerbated by the recent neurosurgery.

On this basis, Chloe met criteria for face-to-face assessment with a view to intervention as part of the research study.

We completed our assessment approximately four months following the last contact that Chloe had had with the neuropsychiatry service. The full assessment was a combination of a computerized diagnostic interview (DAWBA; Goodman et al. Reference Goodman, Ford, Richards, Gatward and Meltzer2000) and goal-based, to determine eligibility for the research study intervention.

Chloe described spending a lot of time comparing herself with other people, such as her older siblings and best friend. She often thought that she did not compare favourably with them, and worried about her appearance, weight and academic abilities, as well as the impact of epilepsy on her life. Chloe had missed a significant amount of school due to the epilepsy surgery, and felt behind academically compared with peers and family. She reported that her mood was very labile and that she frequently became tearful. For example, she said that she might be very happy all day but if someone said something that upset her, she would become very tearful and low. Chloe's self-evaluation was overly dependent on her eating, shape and weight. She tried to limit her calorie intake and wanted to have more control over the intake of food, although she did eat three meals per day. Objectively, she was in the healthy weight range, but her concerns about eating were that if she put on more weight, then people would not like her. She worried about her appetite and weight; she explained that she used food as comfort, but did want to lose weight. She was highly pre-occupied by thoughts of eating, shape and weight and such pre-occupation interfered with her daily life, for example her ability to concentrate on her work. She also reported poor sleep, saying that it took her two hours to get to sleep. She thought that this may be partly due to the neurosurgery and medications. At the time of the assessment, she was taking additional medications to help her sleep. Her mood was lower when she had not slept well. Chloe made an effort to see her friends frequently, which she had noticed had a positive impact on her mood.

Regarding goals, Chloe wanted to work on:

  1. 1. Reducing comparison with other people;

  2. 2. Being able to get to sleep more quickly;

  3. 3. Worrying less about what she ate.

Formulation and plan

Chloe had symptoms of depression, anxiety and an unspecified eating disorder. Whilst these did not meet full diagnostic criteria, they were significantly impairing, and causing difficulties in day-to-day life. Angold and colleagues (Reference Angold, Costello, Farmer, Burns and Erkanli1999) demonstrated that in children and young people, ‘across a variety of “caseness measures”, those with symptomatic impairment proved to be more disturbed than those without either a diagnosis or impairment, and as disturbed as those with a diagnosis but without impairment’. We therefore considered that it was important to offer intervention for these impairing symptoms.

Many of the symptoms stemmed from beliefs around not being good enough, either academically or in appearance, in comparison with peers and high-achieving family members, and worry about the future. Her symptoms were linked to epilepsy and the impact that this had had on her cognitive abilities, education, and her future as an independent young woman.

The intervention investigated in the research study was a modular intervention, which was chosen as it could address multiple co-occurring common mental health problems, i.e. anxiety, depression and disruptive behaviour. In Chloe's case, we had to make the clinical decision as to whether to begin the treatment with the anxiety module or the depression module, given these two areas of difficulties were identified by Chloe as priorities. Chloe's goals for treatment were broad and could be seen as relating to depression, anxiety, eating and low self-esteem, but we jointly decided with Chloe to start with the depression module, for several reasons. Firstly, Chloe thought that all of the worries were secondary to her present low mood. Secondly, the anxiety module is based on evidence-based protocols for the treatment of anxiety in children. These are largely behaviourally based, involving hierarchies and gradual exposure to situations that make the child or young person anxious. Chloe was not avoiding any activities and her anxiety was primarily cognitively based worry linked to low self-esteem. Finally, Chloe was tearful on presentation and low in motivation and we were concerned that low mood would interfere with treatment progress for anxiety. These reasons, together with the known high risks of suicide in people with epilepsy (e.g. Christensen et al., Reference Christensen, Vestergaard, Mortensen, Sidenius and Agerbo2007) led us to focus initially on treatment of the low mood while simultaneously monitoring her anxiety and eating difficulties.

Chloe was therefore offered a ten-session telephone guided self-help intervention as part of the research study, using a depression protocol focused on her goals for treatment in the first instance. The flexibility of the modular approach allowed us to potentially change to the anxiety module if this was necessary.

Due to her age and personal preferences, all sessions were undertaken with Chloe and without involvement of her parents.

Materials sent after each session were those included in most evidence-based protocols for the treatment of depression (Table 1).

Table 1. Content of intervention sessions

Outcome

Weekly measures

Figures 1 and 2 illustrate progress towards goals and ratings on the symptom based measure, respectively. They demonstrate that progress was made towards goals, and symptoms decreased across treatment. There was some understandable fluctuation that was linked to life events, such as an EEG demonstrating some remaining epileptic activity.

Fig. 1. Client-reported session-by-session progress towards goals on a 1–10 scale

Fig. 2. Client-reported session-by-session progress on the depression symptom measure: ‘How are things? Depression’

Pre, post and follow-up measures

SDQ

Whilst the overall stress scale of the SDQ did not demonstrate clinically significant change for either the parent or young person measures, the parent-reported emotional subscale score was 7 prior to intervention (very high range), 5 post-intervention and at 1-month follow-up (high range), and 3 at the 3-month follow-up (average range) (see Table 2). The young person reported score was 7 prior to intervention (very high range), reducing to 3 (average range) at post-intervention and 1-month follow-up time points, and 4 (slightly raised) at the 3-month follow-up. There was clinically significant and reliable change on the young person report between pre-intervention and post-intervention measures, but not between pre-intervention and 3-month follow-up.

Table 2. Scores on standardized measures at pre- and post-intervention and 1- and 3-month follow-up sessions

*Clinically significant change between pre-intervention score and post score, 1-month follow-up or 3-month follow-up; +reliable change between pre-intervention score and post score, 1-month follow-up or 3-month follow-up (for changes which were clinically significant).

RCADS

The parent reported RCADS total Anxiety and Depression scores fell within the clinical range (T scores above 70) prior to intervention and within the non-clinical range post-intervention. It remained in the non-clinical range at both follow-up time points. On examining the anxiety and depression scales separately, the change was mostly within the anxiety scales, and not depression. The young person reported RCADS total anxiety and depression scores fell within the non-clinical range at all time points.

PedsQL

Total PedsQL scores were in the clinical range prior to intervention, and fell within the non-clinical range post-intervention and at first follow-up. These changes were not stable, however. The scores then reduced to the clinical range by 3-month follow-up.

Other outcomes

Chloe was interviewed about her experience of the intervention by a research assistant who was not involved in the intervention delivery. She and her parents also completed an Experience of Service Questionnaire. Chloe said that she found the intervention helpful, that she liked the convenience of having the therapy over the telephone, and found that it was able to fit around her life more easily. She also said that she found it easier to talk to someone on the telephone rather than in person. Chloe's eating difficulties had been informally monitored throughout treatment and Chloe reported that they were much improved post-treatment and at follow-up. At the end of treatment and at follow-up, Chloe did not meet criteria for any Axis 1 disorder as assessed by clinician rated DAWBA.

Discussion

This ‘simple’ intervention appeared to be effective in working towards Chloe's goals in this ‘complex’ case (notwithstanding limitations of single case designs and measurement). The standard strategies were able to tackle epilepsy-related difficulties (e.g. worry about having another seizure) as well as those that seemed more distantly linked to the epilepsy (such as worries about weight). The intervention used was in fact simpler than we had originally anticipated. The intervention was based on the MATCH-ADTC protocol because of its modular nature, which allows us to treat co-occurring mental health problems through use of different modules. We did not have to switch modules, as progression was maintained throughout treatment. This meant that in reality, we had used a guided self-help version of an evidence-based treatment for depression.

The meaning of this is unclear and comes back to the issue of what defines a complex case. Clinically, this presentation is neurologically complex, but very straightforward from a mental health point of view. It seems as though the co-morbid chronic illness may cloud judgement of what is in fact a straightforward presentation of depression and anxiety in a young person, which evidence suggests can be treated using guided self-help (Pennant et al. Reference Pennant, Loucas, Whittington, Creswell, Fonagy and Fuggle2015). It seems that complex cases are self-defining as those which do not respond well to standard treatments and therefore may require a different and/or more personalised approach. However, this case report provides some evidence that until we attempt to treat them, we do not know whether or not they will respond to an intervention. To date, it appears that services (and perhaps clients themselves) may have assumed that the mental health problems of children and young people with chronic illnesses are complex and will not respond to intervention, despite no clear evidence of this.

Epstein (Reference Epstein1984) defined a ‘modern principle of parsimony’ for psychology as ‘where we have no reason to do otherwise and where two theories account for the same facts, we should prefer the one which is briefer, which makes assumptions with which we can easily dispense, which refers to observables, and which has the greatest possible generality’. In this case, we have two alternative ‘theories’; the first, that mental health disorders in the presence of chronic physical illness create complexity such that standard interventions, known to be efficacious across a wide range of populations, will not be effective; the second, that these cases are no more complex than those seen within usual clinical practice. Following the principle of parsimony, we would suggest that until there is evidence to suggest that children and young people with mental health difficulties in the context of chronic illness are not treatable via the current evidence-based interventions for mental health difficulties in children and young people, that research is focused on determining whether they are treatable using these methods, in order to maximise access to intervention as quickly as possible to an undertreated group.

Contribution to the literature

Evidence-based CBT interventions have a very small evidence base in treating mental health disorders in children and young people with chronic illness. Whilst there is a wide evidence-base for paediatric psychology interventions more broadly, very few studies investigate samples where patients meet pre-defined criteria on a measure of mental health (Bennett et al. Reference Bennett, Shafran, Coughtrey, Walker and Heyman2015). This case report is very preliminary evidence that it may be possible to treat mental health problems in the context of chronic neurological conditions in children using a guided self-help approach. It is also the first study to use the MATCH-ADTC intervention in a guided self-help format.

Limitations

This case report may provide preliminary evidence to suggest that that it is possible to use simple guided self-help CBT interventions to treat mental health disorders in the context of apparent complexity due to a chronic illness. However, there are a number of limitations to this conclusion. Firstly, whilst it is debatable whether the physical illness adds to the complexity of the case overall, it does add a level of complexity to measurement; for example, the quality of life measure is directly impacted by physical health. Similarly, other measures, although not measuring physical health per se, are likely to be affected by physical health. For example, some questions are directly associated with physical symptoms (on the SDQ, one item is ‘Often complains of headaches, stomach aches or sickness’), or may be impacted by external events at any given time point (e.g. ‘Many worries, often seems worried’). We know that at the time of the second follow-up, Chloe was experiencing worries because of results of a recent EEG suggesting possible remaining epileptic activity, and this may be one reason that the Quality of Life measure reverted back to the clinical range at 3-month follow-up. However, Chloe was able to cope with these worries, and her progress towards the specific goals outlined at the start of the intervention was maintained. There were several other measurement issues within the case, including discrepancies between parent and young person report on the measures. It raises questions regarding whether broad symptom based measures are the best measure of progress in these cases, or whether in fact specific goal-based measures may be more reflective of change within therapy.

Secondly, the nature of the study design, involving only one participant, and without repeated baseline measures, is limited. It may simply have been the passage of time, over which Chloe gradually adapted to life and transitioning into a young adult. Further research is needed to investigate the use of standard CBT interventions (included guided self-help) for the treatment of mental health disorders in children and young people with chronic neurological conditions.

Main points

  1. (1) This case report is initial evidence that it may be possible to use simple guided self-help CBT interventions to treat mental health disorders in the context of apparent complexity due to a chronic illness.

  2. (2) Given that clinicians consider a large proportion of their cases to be complex, it is not feasible to offer all patients ‘complex’ interventions and it may not be necessary.

  3. (3) Guided self-help appears to be a clinically and cost-effective way to disseminate evidence-based practice to a large number of people and further research is needed to determine whether this is the case for young people with mental health difficulties in the context of chronic illness.

Learning objectives

  1. (1) To illustrate the treatment of a young person with mental health disorders in the context of epilepsy

  2. (2) To demonstrate the effectiveness of a standard treatment protocol for a young person with a complex presentation

  3. (3) To learn about the utility of brief ‘simple’ interventions to treat mental health disorders in complex populations, such as those with chronic illnesses

References

Recommended follow-up reading

Borntrager, CF, Chorpita, BF, Higa-McMillan, C, Weisz, JR (2015). Provider attitudes toward evidence-based practices: are the concerns with the evidence or with the manuals? Psychiatric Services 60, 677681.Google Scholar
Chorpita, BF, Weisz, JR (2009). Modular approach to therapy for children with anxiety, depression, trauma, or conduct problems (MATCH-ADTC). Satellite Beach, FL: PracticeWise LLC.Google Scholar
Weisz, JR, Chorpita, BF, Palinkas, LA, Schoenwald, SK, Miranda, J, Bearman, SK et al. (2012). Testing standard and modular designs for psychotherapy treating depression, anxiety, and conduct problems in youth: A randomized effectiveness trial. Archives of General Psychiatry 69, 274282.Google Scholar

References

Angold, A, Costello, EJ, Farmer, EM, Burns, BJ, Erkanli, A (1999). Impaired but undiagnosed. Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 38, 129137.Google Scholar
Asato, MR, Doss, JL, Plioplys, S (2015). Clinic-friendly screening for cognitive and mental health problems in school-aged youth with epilepsy. Epilepsy & Behavior 48, 97102.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barkley, RA (1997). Defiant Children: A Clinician's Manual for Assessment and Parent Training (2nd edition). New York, NY: Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Bennett, S, Shafran, R, Coughtrey, A, Walker, S, Heyman, I (2015). Psychological interventions for mental health disorders in children with chronic physical illness: a systematic review. Archives of Disease in Childhood 100, 308316.Google Scholar
Blocher, JB, Fujikawa, M, Sung, C, Jackson, DC, Jones, JE (2013). Computer-assisted cognitive behavioral therapy for children with epilepsy and anxiety: a pilot study. Epilepsy and Behavior 27, 7076.Google Scholar
Children's Commissioner (2016). Lightning Review: Access to Child and Adolesent Mental Health Services May 2016. Available at: https://www.childrenscommissioner.gov.uk/publication/lightning-review-access-to-child-and-adolescent-mental-health-services/ Google Scholar
Chorpita, BF, Weisz, JR (2009). Modular approach to therapy for children with anxiety, depression, trauma, or conduct problems (MATCH-ADTC). Satellite Beach, FL: PracticeWise LLC.Google Scholar
Chorpita, BF, Yim, L, Moffitt, C, Umemoto, LA, Francis, SE (2000). Assessment of symptoms of DSM-IV anxiety and depression in children: A revised child anxiety and depression scale. Behaviour Research and Therapy 38, 835855.Google Scholar
Christensen, J, Vestergaard, M, Mortensen, PB, Sidenius, P, Agerbo, E (2007). Epilepsy and risk of suicide: a population-based case–control study. The Lancet Neurology 6, 693698.Google Scholar
Clarke, DF, Roberts, W, Daraksan, M, Dupuis, A, McCabe, J, Wood, H et al. (2005). The prevalence of autistic spectrum disorder in children surveyed in a tertiary care epilepsy clinic. Epilepsia 46, 19701977.Google Scholar
Cottrell, D (2015). Prevention and treatment of psychiatric disorders in children with chronic physical illness. Archives of Disease in Childhood 100, 303304.Google Scholar
Cuijpers, P, Donker, T, van Straten, A, Li, J, Andersson, G (2010). Is guided self-help as effective as face-to-face psychotherapy for depression and anxiety disorders? A systematic review and meta-analysis of comparative outcome studies. Psychological Medicine 40, 19431957.Google Scholar
Dunn, DW, Austin, JK, Harezlak, J (2003). ADHD and epilepsy in childhood. Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology 45, 5054.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Epstein, R (1984). The principle of parsimony and some applications in psychology. The Journal of Mind and Behavior 5, 119130.Google Scholar
Ettinger, AB (2006). Psychotropic effects of antiepileptic drugs. Neurology 67, 19161925.Google Scholar
Fastenau, PS, Shen, J, Dunn, DW, Austin, JK (2008). Academic underachievement among children with epilepsy proportion exceeding psychometric criteria for learning disability and associated risk factors. Journal of Learning Disabilities 41, 195207.Google Scholar
Goodman, R (1997). The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire: a research note. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 38, 581586.Google Scholar
Goodman, R, Ford, T, Richards, H, Gatward, R, Meltzer, H (2000). The Development and Well-Being Assessment: description and initial validation of an integrated assessment of child and adolescent psychopathology. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 41, 645655.Google Scholar
Hadert, A (2013). Adapting Cognitive Behavioural Therapy Interventions for Anxiety or Depression to Meet the Needs of People with Long-term Physical Health Conditions: A Mixed-Methods Study (Doctoral dissertation). Retrieved from: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/13705 Google Scholar
Hesdorffer, DC, Ishihara, L, Mynepalli, L, Webb, DJ, Weil, J, Hauser, WA (2012). Epilepsy, suicidality, and psychiatric disorders: a bidirectional association. Annals of Neurology 72, 184191.Google Scholar
Heyman, I, Skuse, D, Goodman, R (2015a). Brain disorders and psychopathology. In Thapar, A, Pine, DS, Leckman, JF, Scott, S, Snowling, MJ, Taylor, E (eds). Rutter's Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 6th edition, pp. 389402. Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hofmann, SG, Asnaani, A, Vonk, IJ, Sawyer, AT, Fang, A (2012). The efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy: a review of meta-analyses. Cognitive Therapy and Research 36, 427440.Google Scholar
Hoppe, C, Elger, CE (2011). Depression in epilepsy: a critical review from a clinical perspective. Nature Reviews Neurology 7, 462472.Google Scholar
Huhn, M, Tardy, M, Spineli, LM, Kissling, W, Förstl, H, Pitschel-Walz, G et al. (2014). Efficacy of pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy for adult psychiatric disorders: a systematic overview of meta-analyses. Journal of the American Medical Association Psychiatry 71, 706715.Google Scholar
Hysing, M, Elgen, I, Gillberg, C, Lie, SA, Lundervold, AJ (2007). Chronic physical illness and mental health in children. Results from a large-scale population study. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 48, 785792.Google Scholar
James, AD, James, G, Cowdrey, FA, Soler, A, Weatherall, R (2005). Cognitive behavioural therapy for anxiety disorders in children and adolescents. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 4, CD004690.Google Scholar
Kanner, AM (2011). Depression and epilepsy: a bidirectional relation? Epilepsia 52 (S1), 2127.Google Scholar
Kanner, AM (2003). Depression in epilepsy: prevalence, clinical semiology, pathogenic mechanisms, and treatment. Biological Psychiatry 54, 388398.Google Scholar
Katon, WJ (2003). Clinical and health services relationships between major depression, depressive symptoms, and general medical illness. Biological Psychiatry 54, 216226.Google Scholar
Katon, WJ, Von Korff, M, Lin, EH, Simon, G, Ludman, E, Russo, J et al. (2004). The pathways study: a randomized trial of collaborative care in patients with diabetes and depression. Archives of General Psychiatry 61, 10421049.Google Scholar
Katon, WJ, Richardson, L, Russo, J, Lozano, P, McCauley, E (2006). Quality of mental health care for youth with asthma and comorbid anxiety and depression. Medical Care 44, 10641072.Google Scholar
Kendall, PC (1990). Coping Cat Manual. Ardmore, PA: Workbook Publishing.Google Scholar
Kovacs, M, Mukerji, P, Drash, A, Iyengar, S (1995). Biomedical and psychiatric risk factors for retinopathy among children with IDDM. Diabetes Care 18, 15921599.Google Scholar
Last, A, Ford, T, Henley, W, Norman, S, Goodman, R (2013). Feasibility of the Development and Well Being Assessment as an adjunct to clinical assessment in child and adolescent mental health services. Child and Adolescent Mental Health 19, 142146.Google Scholar
Lau, AS (2006). Making the case for selective and directed cultural adaptations of evidence-based treatments: examples from parent training. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice 13, 295310.Google Scholar
Lespérance, F, Frasure-Smith, N, Talajic, M, Bourassa, MG (2002). Five-year risk of cardiac mortality in relation to initial severity and one-year changes in depression symptoms after myocardial infarction. Circulation 105, 10491053.Google Scholar
Lilienfeld, SO, Ritschel, LA, Lynn, SJ, Cautin, RL, Latzman, RD (2013). Why many clinical psychologists are resistant to evidence-based practice: root causes and constructive remedies. Clinical Psychology Review 33, 883900.Google Scholar
Lousada, J, Weisz, J, Hudson, P, Swain, T (2015). Psychotherapy provision in the UK: time to think again. The Lancet Psychiatry 2, 289291.Google Scholar
McGrady, ME, Hood, KK (2013). Cognitive behavioral therapy for adolescents with Type 1 diabetes and subclinical depressive symptoms. Diabetes Management 3, 207215.Google Scholar
Nadkarni, S, Devinsky, O (2005). Psychotropic effects of antiepileptic drugs. Epilepsy Currents 5, 176181.Google Scholar
NICE (2005). Depression in children and young people: identification and management. Available at:http://www.nice.org.uk/CG28 Google Scholar
NICE (2009a). Depression in adults: recognition and management (last updated 2016). Available at: http://www.nice.org.uk/CG090 Google Scholar
NICE (2009b). Treatment and management of depression in adults, including adults with a chronic physical health problem. Available at: http://www.nice.org.uk/CG091 Google Scholar
NICE (2011). Generalised anxiety disorder and panic disorder in adults: management. Available at:https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg113 Google Scholar
Ott, D, Siddarth, P, Gurbani, S, Koh, S, Tournay, A, Shields, WD, Caplan, R (2003). Behavioral disorders in pediatric epilepsy: unmet psychiatric need. Epilepsia 44, 591597.Google Scholar
Pennant, ME, Loucas, CE, Whittington, C, Creswell, C, Fonagy, P, Fuggle, P et al. (2015). Computerised therapies for anxiety and depression in children and young people: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Behaviour Research and Therapy 67, 118.Google Scholar
Prince, M, Patel, V, Saxena, S, Maj, M, Maselko, J, Phillips, MR, Rahman, A (2007). No health without mental health. The Lancet 370, 859877.Google Scholar
Reigada, LC, Benkov, KJ, Bruzzese, JM, Hoogendoorn, C, Szigethy, E, Briggie, A et al. (2013). Integrating illness concerns into cognitive behavioral therapy for children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease and co-occurring anxiety. Journal for Specialists in Pediatric Nursing 18, 133143.Google Scholar
Reilly, C, Atkinson, P, Das, KB, Chin, RF, Aylett, SE, Burch, V et al. (2014). Neurobehavioral comorbidities in children with active epilepsy: a population-based study. Pediatrics 133, e1586e1593.Google Scholar
Shafran, R, Clark, DM, Fairburn, CG, Arntz, A, Barlow, DH, Ehlers, A et al. (2009). Mind the gap: improving the dissemination of CBT. Behaviour Research and Therapy 47, 902909.Google Scholar
Sillanpää, M (2004). Learning disability: occurrence and long-term consequences in childhood-onset epilepsy. Epilepsy and Behavior 5, 937944.Google Scholar
Stirman, SW, Crits-Christoph, P, DeRubeis, RJ (2004). Achieving successful dissemination of empirically supported psychotherapies: a synthesis of dissemination theory. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice 11, 343359.Google Scholar
Szigethy, E, Kenney, E, Carpenter, J, Hardy, DM, Fairclough, D, Bousvaros, A et al. (2007). Cognitive-behavioral therapy for adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease and subsyndromal depression. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 46, 12901298.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tellez-Zenteno, JF, Patten, SB, Jetté, N, Williams, J, Wiebe, S (2007). Psychiatric comorbidity in epilepsy: a population-based analysis. Epilepsia 48, 23362344.Google Scholar
Varni, JW, Seid, M, Kurtin, PS (2001). PedsQL™ 4.0: Reliability and validity of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ Version 4.0 Generic Core Scales in healthy and patient populations. Medical Care 39, 800812.Google Scholar
Weisz, JR, Chorpita, BF, Palinkas, LA, Schoenwald, SK, Miranda, J, Bearman, SK et al. (2012). Testing standard and modular designs for psychotherapy treating depression, anxiety, and conduct problems in youth: a randomized effectiveness trial. Archives of General Psychiatry 69, 274282.Google Scholar
Weisz, JR, Thurber, CA, Sweeney, L, Proffitt, VD, LeGagnoux, GL (1997). Brief treatment of mild-to-moderate child depression using primary and secondary control enhancement training. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 65, 703.Google Scholar
Whooley, MA, de Jonge, P, Vittinghoff, E, Otte, C, Moos, R, Carney, RM et al. (2008). Depressive symptoms, health behaviors, and risk of cardiovascular events in patients with coronary heart disease. Journal of the American Medical Association 300, 23792388.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Content of intervention sessions

Figure 1

Fig. 1. Client-reported session-by-session progress towards goals on a 1–10 scale

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Client-reported session-by-session progress on the depression symptom measure: ‘How are things? Depression’

Figure 3

Table 2. Scores on standardized measures at pre- and post-intervention and 1- and 3-month follow-up sessions

Submit a response

Comments

No Comments have been published for this article.