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Nationwide Implementation of Unguided Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Adolescent Depression: Observational Study of SPARX

journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-26, 02:25 authored by Theresa Fleming, Mathijs Lucassen, Chris Frampton, Varsha Parag, Chris Bullen, Sally Merry, Matthew Shepherd, Karolina Stasiak
Abstract Background Internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy (iCBT) interventions are effective in clinical trials; however, iCBT implementation data are seldom reported. Objective The objective of this study is to evaluate uptake, adherence, and changes in symptoms of depression for 12‐ to 19-year-olds using an unguided pure self-help iCBT intervention (SPARX; Smart, Positive, Active, Realistic, X-factor thoughts) during the first 7 years of it being publicly available without referral in Aotearoa New Zealand. Methods SPARX is a 7-module, self-help intervention designed for adolescents with mild to moderate depression. It is freely accessible to anyone with a New Zealand Internet Protocol address, without the need for a referral, and is delivered in an unguided “serious game” format. The New Zealand implementation of SPARX includes 1 symptom measure—the Patient Health Questionnaire adapted for Adolescents (PHQ-A)—which is embedded at the start of modules 1, 4, and 7. We report on uptake, the number of modules completed, and changes in depressive symptoms as measured by the PHQ-A. Results In total, 21,320 adolescents aged 12 to 19 years (approximately 2% of New Zealand 12‐ to 19-year-olds) registered to use SPARX. Of these, 63.6% (n=13,564; comprising n=8499, 62.7% female, n=4265, 31.4% male, and n=800, 5.9% another gender identity or gender not specified; n=8741, 64.4% New Zealand European, n=1941, 14.3% Māori, n=1202, 8.9% Asian, n=538, 4.0% Pacific, and n=1142, 8.4% another ethnic identity; mean age 14.9, SD 1.9 years) started SPARX. The mean PHQ-A at baseline was 13.6 (SD 7.7) with 16.1% (n=1980) reporting no or minimal symptoms, 37.4% (n=4609) reporting mild to moderate symptoms (ie, the target group) and 46.7% (n=5742) reporting moderately severe or severe symptoms. Among those who started, 51.1% (n=6927) completed module 1, 7.4% (n=997) completed at least 4 modules, and 3.1% (n=416) completed all 7 modules. The severity of symptoms reduced from baseline to modules 4 and 7. Mean PHQ-A scores for baseline, module 4, and module 7 for those who completed 2 or more assessments were 14.0 (SD 7.0), 11.8 (SD 7.9), and 10.5 (SD 8.5), respectively; mean difference for modules 1-4 was 2.2 (SD 5.7; P<.001) and for modules 1-7 was 3.6 (SD 7.0; P<.001). Corresponding effect sizes were 0.38 (modules 1-4) and 0.51 (modules 1-7). Conclusions SPARX reached a meaningful proportion of the adolescent population. The effect size for those who engaged with it was comparable to trial results. However, completion was low. Key challenges included logistical barriers such as slow download speeds and compatibility with some devices. Ongoing attention to rapidly evolving technologies and engagement with them are required. Real-world implementation analyses offer important insights for understanding and improving the impact of evidence-based digital tools and should be routinely reported.

Funding

Digital mental health research outputs | Funder: Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington

History

Preferred citation

Fleming, T., Lucassen, M., Frampton, C., Parag, V., Bullen, C., Merry, S., Shepherd, M. & Stasiak, K. (n.d.). Nationwide Implementation of Unguided Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Adolescent Depression: Observational Study of SPARX. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 27, e66047-e66047. https://doi.org/10.2196/66047

Journal title

Journal of Medical Internet Research

Volume

27

Pagination

e66047-e66047

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

Publication status

Published online

Online publication date

2025-08-25

eISSN

1438-8871

Article number

v27i1e66047

Language

en

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