Symptom heterogeneity in students with mild to severe depression symptomatology and their differential symptom-specific changes during an internet-based, guided cognitive behavioural therapy intervention
Lynn Boschloo, Jasmijn Wijnands, Nadia Garnefski, Vivian Kraaij, Petra Hurks, Danielle Remmerswaal, Reinout W. Wiers, Sascha Struijs, Elske Salemink

TL;DR
This study examines how students with depression show different symptoms and how these symptoms change during an online therapy program.
Contribution
The study introduces a symptom-specific approach to understanding depression heterogeneity and treatment response in students.
Findings
Baseline depression symptoms showed substantial variation among students.
The guided iCBT intervention reduced symptoms, but with varying effect sizes across symptoms.
Changes in individual symptoms were differentially related to changes in overall quality of life.
Abstract
Students often report depression and stress symptomatology but may differ in their symptoms and their symptom-specific changes during interventions. This study adopted a symptom-specific approach and examined 1) individual symptoms in students experiencing mild to severe depression symptomatology and 2) changes in individual symptoms during a guided, internet-based intervention. We zoomed in on how these (changes in) symptoms were related to each other and to (changes in) overall quality of life. This study included 1816 students with mild to severe baseline depression symptomatology, of which 412 activated their account for an eight-week, guided, internet-based Cognitive Behavioural Therapy intervention (Moodpep) and completed the post-treatment assessment. Depression symptomatology was assessed with the Patient Health Questionnaire, stress symptomatology with the Perceived Stress…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health Research Topics · Digital Mental Health Interventions · Anxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes
