Behavioral skill practice as a predictor of mood and family functioning in adolescents with bipolar and depressive mood disorders: Results of a 6‐month randomized trial of family‐focused therapy

Author:

Weintraub Marc J.1ORCID,Merranko John A.2,Ichinose Megan C.1,Denenny Danielle M.1,Walshaw Patricia D.1ORCID,Morgan‐Fleming Georga1,Brown Robin D.1,Arevian Armen C.3,Miklowitz David J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California Los Angeles California USA

2. Department of Psychiatry University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

3. Chorus Innovations, Inc Long Beach California USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveBehavioral interventions require considerable practice of treatment skills in between therapy sessions. The effects of these treatments may vary with the degree to which patients are able to implement these practices. In offspring of parents with bipolar and major depressive disorders, we examined whether youth who frequently practiced communication and problem‐solving skills between family‐focused therapy (FFT) sessions had less severe mood symptoms and better psychosocial functioning over 6 months than youth who practiced less frequently.MethodsWe randomly assigned offspring (ages 12–19) of parents with mood disorders to 12 sessions of FFT plus a mobile app that encouraged the practice of communication, problem‐solving and mood management skills (FFT‐MyCoachConnect [MCC] condition) or 12 sessions of FFT with an app that only allowed for tracking of symptoms and stress (FFT‐Track condition). Independent evaluators assessed youths' mood and psychosocial functioning at 9‐week intervals over 27 weeks. Clinicians rated participants' between‐session skill practice at each FFT session.ResultsFFT‐MCC was associated with more frequent skill practice than FFT‐Track over 18 weeks of treatment. Skill practice was associated with reductions in youths' mood instability and perceptions of family conflict over 27 weeks in both app conditions. Skill practice mediated the effects of app condition on youths' mood instability and family functioning.ConclusionsMobile applications as adjuncts to family therapy for youth with mood disorders can help increase skill practice. These findings provide preliminary causal evidence for behavioral skill practice improving mood symptoms and family functioning among youth with mood disorders.

Publisher

Wiley

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