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Good to Know: Which Websites Can Reduce Anxiety and Depression?

 

Painting of a sad womanBefore we go on, you should know there are no sunshine-y quick fixes coming in this post. The kind of websites we’ll be looking at take a lot of effort. And there’s no guarantee the effort will pay off. There isn’t with any therapy for anxiety and depression.

Anxiety and depression can be stinkingly tough conditions to budge. Life is so much tougher when one or both are dragging you down. Any demanding therapy is tougher, too. It’s odd, really, that so many are quick to judge others, and themselves, as weak when they struggle with this.

Extra obstacles, it seems to me, deserve extra recognition. It’s a bit like that classic cartoon by Bob Thaves, commenting on Ginger Rogers, the female half of the legendary Astaire and Rogers dancing duo. Sure, Astaire was great, but don’t forget she “did everything he did backwards…and in high heels.”

Despite the strength that life with depression and anxiety calls on, the stigma of weakness clings, along with the notion that you can just “snap out of it”. There are other ways to think about this. David Dobbs writes of one: “…the sensitivity that opens the person to depression becomes a strength that lets them overcome not just it, but other obstacles”.

Although it’s not easy to change, the way we think about things can affect our moods and behavior. We can get caught in uncontrollable brooding and ruminating about the future or past. All of that can get us caught in vicious cycles that keep us down.

Photo of rough tree barkThat’s not the cause of everyone’s depression and anxiety, nor the reason it continues. But it is common. And changing that kind of deeply ingrained pattern of thinking and behaving can help. Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) is one way to work through that process.

Between any situation and our reaction or response to it, there is a choice, even if it’s made unconsciously. The work of CBT is to try to change those of our automatic reactions that are futile and misery-inducing.

Take catastrophizing, for example. That’s when we start imagining consequences we feel are likely – how this could lead to this and this and this – and that would be, inevitably, disastrous.

CBT techniques aim to lessen the impact of this kind of cognitive tailspin. And reduce the kind of self-talk that we would condemn as unacceptable bullying in others (“Why don’t you just get a grip, you…”).

I’m not a mental health professional. I became interested in online therapy when colleagues and I were analyzing studies of the internet’s effects. That was many years ago, so our study is way out of date. The internet hadn’t been around all that long then. But evidence suggested that CBT could work just as well in do-it-yourself (DIY) computerized or online form, at least for some problems.

Photo of safe place signRigorously studying the impact of psychological therapies is critical. That’s not just so that we don’t waste our time with things that don’t help. Even good ideas with the best of intentions can end up hurting people.

That happened, for example, with “iChill”. That’s internet-based CBT that, it was hoped, would prevent generalized anxiety disorder. But a randomized trial found not only didn’t it prevent the condition, it might have caused worry and depression.

Adverse effects of psychological therapies are the subject of an interesting research program at the University of Sheffield, called AdEPT. They have yet to report the results of this work, but they have started an interesting website, Supporting Safe Therapy.

Time to answer the question we started with: Which websites can reduce anxiety and depression?

There have been dozens of trials now, particularly of CBT-based internet sites or computer programs – and for many conditions. There are also plenty of good systematic reviews, analyzing these trials. (I’ve written explainers about systematic reviews and meta-analyses, if you’re interested in learning more about this kind of research.)

To find websites with evidence of benefit, focusing specifically on anxiety and depression, and not requiring therapist support, I relied on four systematic reviews published in 2013 and 2014. (They’re listed at the end of the post.)

Photo of sunlight and shadeAlthough there are quite a few, I could only find three that were free globally, in English – and they’re all from Australia:

If you’re in the UK, you might be able to get a prescription to websites endorsed after NHS review – like Beating the Blues (and FearFighter for panic and phobia). If you’re in Australia, there’s also the BRAVE-Online program for children and young people. There are solid resources available in the Netherlands and Sweden, but I don’t have the language skills for developing that list.

Some universities and colleges have programs available to their students. And you can see more resources here, but they might not have the scientific assessment behind them that the others do. There are books, too, which I hope to come back to in the future.

What can you expect if you try a website like this? It’s not a way to get instant relief from suffering. It requires work. But on average, many people who try them benefit – how many, and by how much, varies. And there’s not enough research for me to feel confident putting numbers around this.

Online CBT websites won’t suit everybody, though – maybe not even most people. Lots of people abandon them. We don’t really know if working at them harder or longer makes them more effective. And there hasn’t been enough research on how useful (or not) these are for people from different cultures, or for people who have addictions or other mental health problems as well as anxiety or depression.

There is online CBT therapy that’s therapist-guided as well as the DIY kind. Researchers are mixed in their opinions about whether therapists, face-to-face or supporting an online program, make a difference. That’s probably at least partly because they are often therapists themselves.

Photo of grasses against the sky

We collectively spend a great deal of time and money on books, websites, programs, counselors/therapists/gurus – endless theories, lots of people getting rich, on claims they can make us happier. A lot of that is wasted. Most of it isn’t backed up by good science – and much of it, we know, is going to be counter-productive or worse.

Yet, it’s still uncommon in most countries for information on anxiety and depression to even mention internet CBT is an option. Given how many people’s livelihoods are tied up in mental health care one way or another, it’s probably not surprising that free, DIY online therapy faces headwind. That’s a shame. Because even if only a small fraction of the people who try it benefit, it could ease much suffering.

~~~~

UPDATE: 9 December 2015. A trial of online CBT for depression in family doctor/general practitioner care in the UK found no strong benefit of MoodGym and Beating the Blues. After considering it in detail, I don’t think it overturns previous conclusions and I’ve commented on that in detail at PubMed Commons. (I made a small change to this post – making the statement about the systematic review I co-authored in 2003 a little more specific.) 

Here’s a good detailed explanation of CBT.

If you know of somewhere there’s a directory of online therapy websites, linked with the sites and the evidence evaluating them, please add it in the comments or contact me.

The four systematic reviews I relied on for finding these websites:

  • Aleisha Clarke and colleagues on preventing mental health problems in young people (2014)
  • E Bethan Davies and colleagues on improving depression and anxiety in university students (2014)
  • Eric Dedert and colleagues on treating depression and anxiety (a review for the VA, 2013)
  • Dawn Querstret and Mark Copley on rumination and/or worry (2013)

I also found these very useful: “Internet-delivered cognitive behavior therapy for anxiety disorders is here to stay” by Gavin Andrews and colleagues (2015) and “Web-based intervention programs for depression: a scoping review and evaluation” by Tian Renton and colleagues (2014).

The “Why don’t you just…” image in this post is my own (CC-NC license)(Cartoons at Statistically Funny.) Photos also by me (CC-BY): The bark of a tree in California, the firehouse in Cleveland Park, DC, flowers in my home, and some grasses down the street from my home.

 

* The thoughts Hilda Bastian expresses here at Absolutely Maybe are personal, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

 

Discussion
  1. This is a fantastic resource of information. I appreciate the time that must have gone in to preparing it. Thanks for putting it out there Hilda. Glad to share with my social media networks.

  2. That’s so nice – thanks, Kathy! Yes, it was a lot of work – it shouldn’t be that hard. Ideally, given the scale in people’s lives, and therefore public health importance, of anxiety and depression (and other mental health issues online therapy might serve), there would be a repository of all these websites – with the studies that have evaluated linked to them. I hope that happens!

  3. This is a great article the detail it goes into on CBT can be a real help for people and the fact you have linked to many other sources of information it can be a massive help to direct people in the right steps towards recovery

  4. this is tamara gates and think that people need to speek out about depression because people alway make other people feel depressed like me when the voices want to do things to make me feel depressed the will tell my mom to start slamming the door for no reason at all and somebody whos been depressed need make it ilegal people to do that to people because that can make somebody feel like hurting or killing
    somebody and i also want to hear what people are going to be doing to help stop depression. they are doing me the same way they did jesus christ when he was depressed and i think that should be ilegal and somebody need to talk to the police department about making ilegal because people can hurt by somebody doing that and i wanna see somebody talk about it on tv because should put a stop to that so nobody will get killed.

  5. Talking about it can definitely help some people, Tamara – and being depressed is awful. So a lot of people work full-time their whole lives studying ways to help more. Some TV shows include storylines of people depressed, and ways that help and make it worse, and a lot of people see those. Here’s a good website with a lot more information: https://www.beyondblue.org.au There are national help lines for Australia on that website. Many other countries have national help lines and online chat help as well – here are some in the US: http://www.mentalhealth.gov/get-help/immediate-help/index.html Hang in there!

  6. Thank you for this truly helpful article! I just love how you present the facts that there don’t exist quick and easy fixes for anxiety. You just have to be prepared to go through whatever therapy you need to (CBT indeed seems to be the most effective), and that might be quite laborious, though rewarding in the end. You also list great resources. Thank you for your efforts!

  7. It’s a big mistake to fail to mention the large number of websites or structured online forums that are *posing* as “safe places” to speak openly and share healthy behavioral strategies with others suffering from anxiety, depression, and many other mental illnesses without cautioning your readers about the fact that the majority of such sites are data-mining and underwritten by Big Pharma. The truth is these sites are far less interested in helping people cope with mental illness. Rather, they’re motivated by branding and marketing strategies. Like Facebook, this is an easy (and unfortunately legal) way to get vulnerable populations to spill their private health information guts for free and with an absolutely minimal effort. Not that I expect you to care, as such pedestrian matters are certainly beneath you.

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