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Telepsychotherapy with children and families: Lessons gleaned from two decades of translational research

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posted on 2025-08-01, 09:30 authored by SL Wade, LM Gies, AP Fisher, EL Moscato, A-L Adlam, A Bardoni, C Corti, J Limond, AC Modi, SP Raj, T Williams
The novel coronavirus, COVID-19, has led to sweeping changes in psychological practice and the concomitant rapid uptake of telepsychotherapy. Although telepsychotherapy is new to many clinical psychologists, there is considerable research on telepsychotherapy treatments. Nearly two decades of clinical research on telepsychotherapy treatments with children with neurological conditions has the potential to inform emerging clinical practice in the age of COVID-19. Toward that end, we synthesized findings from 14 clinical trials of telepsychotherapy problemsolving and parent training interventions involving more than 800 children and families with diverse diagnoses including traumatic brain injury, epilepsy, brain tumors, congenital heart disease, and perinatal stroke. We summarize efficacy across studies and clinical populations and report feasibility and acceptability data from the perspectives of parents, children, and therapists. We describe adaptation for international contexts and strategies for troubleshooting technological challenges and working with families of varying socioeconomic strata. The extensive research literature reviewed and synthesized provides considerable support for the utility of telepsychotherapy with children with neurological conditions and their families and underscores its high level of acceptability with both diverse clinical populations and providers. During this period of heightened vulnerability and stress and reduced access to usual supports and services, telepsychotherapy approaches such as online family problem-solving treatment and online parenting skills training may allow psychologists to deliver traditional evidence-based treatments virtually while preserving fidelity and efficacy

Funding

N62909-16-1-2174

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)

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© 2020, American Psychological Association

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the American Psychological Association via the DOI in this record

Journal

Journal of Psychotherapy Integration

Publisher

American Psychological Association (APA)

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2020-05-18T08:41:35Z

FOA date

2020-07-13T09:33:56Z

Citation

Vol. 30 (2), pp. 332-347

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  • Archive

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