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Simon Blackwell of the Research and Treatment Center for Mental Health Credit: Research and treatment center for mental health |
The increasing number of mental illnesses is a growing problem for society. The development of psychotherapies on the traditional path cannot keep pace with this.
Researchers at the Ruhr University Bochum (RUB) asked themselves whether there could be a faster and more efficient way to develop and improve psychological interventions. In the journal "Psychological Medicine" they present the so-called Leapfrog design, with which various interventions can be compared efficiently without having to carry out several clinical studies one after the other. The Bochum team around Dr. Simon Blackwell together with a colleague of the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich in the journal "Psychological Medicine", published online.
Adapted method from cancer research
"Clinical studies are mostly time consuming and inefficient," says Blackwell of the RUB's Research and Treatment Center for Mental Health. “You can take years and require hundreds of participants - and in the end it may turn out that the intervention tested is not effective. And even if the intervention were effective, it would probably be wanted to improve it again quickly, because in the meantime, for example, new relevant research data have been published. This in turn means that you have to plan and conduct another, probably even larger and more time-consuming clinical study."