University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Correspondence: Dr Paul Ramchandani, University of Oxford Department of Psychiatry, Warneford Hospital, Headington, Oxford OX3 7JX, UK. E-mail: paul.ramchandani{at}psych.ox.ac.uk.
Declaration of interest None. Funding detailed in Acknowledgements.
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ABSTRACT |
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Aims To review systematically the available evidence from randomised controlled trials of psychological treatments for children who have been sexually abused, and to consider the place of these treatments in a multi-disciplinary service.
Method A systematic search of the available research was undertaken. Included trials were critically appraised and the results considered.
Results Twelve studies were included in the review. The best evidence of efficacy for improving psychological symptoms in these children was found for cognitive-behavioural therapy, particularly for young children.
Conclusions Efficacious treatments existto improve psychological symptoms in children who have experienced sexual abuse. Consideration is given to the place of these treatments within the response of a multi-disciplinary service.
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INTRODUCTION |
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METHOD |
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A search was made of the bibliographic databases Medline, PsycLIT, CINAHL and the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register, using terms including CHILD*, SEXUAL*, ABUSE, THERAP* and TREAT*. We hand-searched the Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, the Journal of Child Psychiatry and Psychology, Child Abuse Review, the British Journal of Psychiatry and Child Abuse and Neglect for the years 19972002. In addition, references from these studies and other reviews were tracked, and authors and other experts in the field (both in the UK and overseas) were consulted in an attempt to recover other trials. To be included, the studies had to be randomised controlled trials, the intervention had to address the behavioural or psychological effects of the sexual abuse, and outcome measures had to be used that reflected this.
The quality of the included studies was assessed using the criteria of Jadad et al (1996). This system considers randomisation, masking (blinding) and withdrawals (drop-outs) from trials. A higher score indicates greater methodological rigour. These criteria have high interrater reliability and good criterion-related validity when compared with longer scoring systems (Jadad et al, 1996). Data were also extracted on numbers and ages of participants, parental and carer involvement in therapy, type and length of therapy, outcome measures used and outcomes reported. The results of the included studies were not statistically combined in a meta-analysis because of the relative heterogeneity of the participants, the therapies and the outcome measures used.
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RESULTS |
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One of the studies was undertaken in Australia (King et al, 2000), two in the UK (Monck et al, 1994; Trowell et al, 2002) and nine in the USA. The studies recruited participants from a variety of sources, including child protection services, social services and medical and mental health practitioners. Most required that the child had experienced sexual abuse recently, and that this had been verified by the relevant child protection or youth justice agency. Children with significant learning problems were generally excluded.
Description of studies
Details of the numbers of children recruited for each study, the outcome
measures used and the results are given in
Table 1.
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Methodological quality of studies
The average quality score for the trials was 2.2 (range 13). Of the
12 studies included in the review, five described the method of randomisation
(Monck et al, 1994;
Berliner & Saunders, 1996; Cohen & Mannarino, 1996,
1998a;
Deblinger et al,
2001). The remaining studies provided no details of the
randomisation procedure. Randomisation was incomplete in one study
(Trowell et al,
2002). Only the study by Celano et al
(1996) described the clinician
assessment as being masked to treatment group. Masking of assessors was not
described by the other studies, although many used parent- and/or
child-completed outcome measures. The attrition rate varied from study to
study. It was not described at all by Burke
(1988). In the other studies it
ranged from 10% (Deblinger et al,
1996) to 35% (Celano et
al, 1996) by the end of the treatment period. By the 2-year
follow-up the rates were much greater from 23%
(Deblinger et al,
1999) to 48% (Berliner &
Saunders, 1996).
Efficacy of different treatments
Cognitive-behavioural therapy
The largest number of research trials, and the evidence for best effect,
comes for CBT. The most convincing evidence is for work with pre-school
children who received 12 sessions of therapy in conjunction with their
non-abusing parent or carer (Cohen & Mannarino,
1996,
1997). Children receiving CBT
showed significantly greater improvement on measures of behaviour problems
such as the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL;
Achenbach & Edelbrock,
1983) and of sexualised behaviour such as the Child Sexual
Behavior Inventory (CSBI; Friedrich et
al, 1992) compared with a control group of children who
received a non-directive course of therapy. These beneficial effects were
maintained up to 1 year later, and appear to be clinically as well as
statistically significant, with 14% of those in the CBT group scoring in the
clinical range on the CSBI and 7% in the clinical range on the Behavior
Profile Total on the CBCL, compared with 40% and 33% respectively in the
control group. However, a study of an 11-session group format of CBT used with
children aged 28 years and their non-offending mothers showed smaller
benefits over a supportive group
(Deblinger et al,
2001). Both groups showed improvements over time, and some small
differences were found favouring CBT, but pre-treatment differences that
existed between the groups call into question the clinical significance of
these small beneficial effects.
There have been more studies of CBT in older children, but the results from these studies are less clear-cut and are not consistent. Berliner & Saunders (1996) found no additional benefit when a specific stress inoculation and graded exposure component was added to a structured group programme. However, a number of acknowledged weaknesses in the design might have hampered this study: the children did not have to be symptomatic and had attended several sessions with a child mental health professional before entering the study, so there is the possibility of floor effects (i.e. both groups having low symptom scores), making it difficult to demonstrate a difference between the two groups following treatment. In addition, the active treatment did not differ greatly from the control procedure in this study.
Celano et al (1996) compared an abuse-specific programme for African American girls with non-directive supportive therapy. Although positive changes were noted in the degree to which mothers and female caretakers blamed themselves, there was no difference between the two groups of children receiving the different forms of therapy. Cohen & Mannarino (1998a) also conducted a study comparing CBT with non-directive supportive therapy in children aged 714 years. Although children in the CBT group had better outcome with respect to scores for depression 5.89 for CBT v. 9.89 for the control, measured using the Children's Depression Inventory (Kovacs, 1983) there was no statistically significant difference for overall behaviour problems or sexualised behaviour. These results were hampered by the large number of children who were either withdrawn from or left the study and the consequently small numbers completing the trial: 49 of 78 children (63%).
Deblinger et al (1996) used a community control group as their comparator. The group receiving CBT had better outcomes than the control group on a variety of measures; the main area of improvement varied depending on who was involved in the treatment (mother only, child only, or mother and child). These relative advantages were maintained at 1-year follow-up (Deblinger et al, 1999). In contrast, Dominguez (2002) found no difference between a group of children (aged 617 years) treated with CBT and those treated with supportive therapy. Both groups were shown to improve over time. However, the small numbers of children completing this trial (25 in total) probably mean that it was insufficiently statistically powered to establish a significant difference between the two groups. King et al (2000) found better outcomes for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms in treated children compared with waiting-list controls, but no difference in outcomes between the different forms in which CBT was delivered (child only or family treatment).
Other theoretical models
There is a dearth of randomised controlled studies investigating the
efficacy of therapy based on other theoretical models. Trowell et al
(2002) used a psychodynamic
model for their therapeutic approach and Baker
(1987) used a Rogerian model.
However, neither of these studies compared this therapeutic approach with an
alternative comparing instead different methods of delivery of the
therapy. Therefore, although both showed improvements in the children treated
this cannot necessarily be taken as evidence of efficacy of the treatment
approach itself.
Group v. individual therapy
There is little consistent evidence favouring one form of therapy delivery
over another. Baker (1987)
found that those receiving group therapy did better on measures of
self-esteem, but no difference was found on any other measure. Trowell et
al (2002) found some
improvements on PTSD outcomes favouring individual therapy, but no difference
on global ratings of outcome. Finally, Monck et al
(1994) found no benefit from
adding group treatment to the family programme at Great Ormond Street
Hospital, London, when objective research measures were used.
Other factors related to efficacy
Although most children and families improve during their participation in a
treatment trial, some become worse
(Berliner & Saunders,
1996). The studies that were able to demonstrate most clearly the
efficacy of treatment were those including only children who were symptomatic
usually with symptoms of PTSD
(Cohen & Mannarino, 1996;
Deblinger et al,
1996; King et al,
2000). A further factor of note is the involvement of a
non-abusing parent or carer in the therapy. Most studies (notably all of those
demonstrating a positive treatment effect) included a parent or carer in the
therapy as family network therapy
(Monck et al, 1994);
in a supportive role (Trowell et
al, 2002); or in the therapy sessions with the child,
sometimes beginning with separate sessions, before having combined sessions
later in the therapy (Celano et
al, 1996; Cohen &
Mannarino, 1996; Deblinger
et al, 1996; King
et al, 2000;
Deblinger et al,
2001). Cohen & Mannarino
(1998b) found that
parental support is the strongest family predictor of good outcome for the
child, at least for young children. Involving a (non-abusing) parent in
therapy can lead to improved parenting skills and increased support for the
child (Celano et al,
1996; Deblinger et
al, 1996).
There seems insufficient evidence to draw firm conclusions about the relative benefit of therapy at different stages of children's development. A number of other key issues remain insufficiently addressed. These include the development or adaptation of treatment for children of different ethnic and cultural backgrounds, and also for children with learning or other disabilities.
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DISCUSSION |
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Main findings of the studies
Conducting therapy with children and their families where the child has
been sexually abused is often difficult. Maintaining the therapy is
problematic, and so it is encouraging that increasing numbers of studies are
now being conducted using randomised methodology. Despite the relative youth
of the research field, and the variety of therapeutic methods studied here,
several clear findings do emerge from this review.
First, there is evidence that some symptomatic children of pre-school age who have been sexually abused benefit from a form of CBT delivered by trained therapists to them and to their parent or carer (Cohen & Mannarino, 1996, 1997). The CBT programme used in this study included child sessions focused on safety education, assertiveness training, attributions towards the abuse, fear and anxiety, and inappropriate behaviours. Parent sessions addressed belief in the child's abuse, attributions regarding the abuse, providing appropriate support to the child, management of inappropriate behaviours and management of the child's fear and anxiety. Sessions used techniques such as cognitive reframing, thought stopping, positive imagery, contingency reinforcement programmes, parent management training and problem-solving. There is something specifically beneficial about the therapy offered as it leads to greater improvement than the non-directive comparison therapy used. Studies of younger children do require replication, however, as a study of young children (aged 28 years) who were not necessarily symptomatic did not show the same degree of specific benefit from CBT (Deblinger et al, 2001). Second, the balance of evidence suggests that older children and adolescents may also benefit from a similar format of CBT. The evidence is less strong for this group than for pre-school children. However, there remains more convincing evidence available for this form of therapy than for other competing therapeutic methods. Third, children who are symptomatic (with symptoms of PTSD or behavioural problems in these studies) are more likely to demonstrate benefit from therapy. Finally, the involvement of a non-abusing parent or carer in therapy is associated with beneficial outcomes for the child. This is especially true for younger children.
Methodological considerations
There are a number of limitations that should be considered when
interpreting the results of this study. As with any systematic review there is
a possibility of publication bias, whereby studies that report positive
outcomes are more likely to be published than those with negative outcomes. We
have taken steps to avoid this by searching for unpublished studies and by
contacting researchers within the field. By these methods we identified three
PhD theses (Baker, 1987;
Burke, 1988;
Dominguez, 2002) and one trial
that was still in progress (Cohen &
Deblinger, 2003).
The overall scores on the Jadad quality scale (Jadad et al, 1996) were low, but higher than those for psychological treatment trials in some other fields, such as children's sleep problems (Ramchandani et al, 2000). This is in part due to the problems of maintaining masking when psychological treatments are being assessed in trials, but also because the method sections of some of the studies were poorly reported.
Until more randomised studies have been conducted in this field, several problems will remain. First, few studies have been replicated in different settings. There is a need for further research to be conducted in different countries with different health and child protection systems. Related to this is the wider issue of generalisability, estimating the extent to which the findings can be extrapolated to a different population - not just because of differences between groups of children in various settings, but also because participants in research studies tend to respond better to treatment than those offered the same treatment outside a clinical trial. Children recruited to these studies are different in some ways from those seen in everyday practice. Children with significant learning disabilities, substance misuse problems and severe mental illness (psychotic illnesses) were excluded from most of the research trials, and so these findings cannot be reliably applied to them. Very young pre-school children are also under-represented in the research base and they are a group at significant risk of abuse. Related to generalisability is the difficulty in predicting which children will improve with treatment, and which might even do worse (Berliner, 1997; Berliner & Saunders, 1996). Third, it remains difficult to identify confidently the components of treatment that are particularly effective. Until there are many more research studies, involving larger numbers of children, it will be difficult to do this. The strategy used by Cohen & Mannarino (1996, 1998a) of comparing CBT with non-directive therapy moves us in this direction, indicating as it does that some of the cognitivebehavioural components are effective, rather than just the process of a therapeutic encounter itself.
Many of these studies have been relatively brief, with short-term follow-up; we do not know therefore if the treatments reduce the long-term problems associated with sexual abuse. The possibility of sleeper effects (whereby children are asymptomatic immediately after the abuse, but present with symptoms at a later developmental stage such as adolescence) has been considered in previous research (Sharland et al, 1996; Trowell et al, 2002), and the current research cannot shed light on these longer-term difficulties. Research on adults who experienced sexual abuse as children has not, as yet, provided answers to these questions either. In a similar vein, the present research can only inform us about symptom measures, as these are the outcomes that have been used. Although these are the most likely outcomes to demonstrate a change in response to therapy directed at symptoms, there is a question as to whether they are the most salient ones. It might be that more generally conceptualised measures of adjustment (e.g. capacity for friendships, relationships with siblings and other family, further abuse, being abusive or bullying, educational adjustment) provide a broader perspective on personality development, on the principle that it is this aspect of adult outcome that is particularly damaged by child sexual abuse. Similarly, a purely trauma-focused model of therapy may be too narrow for the experience of child sexual abuse, and does not fully address the range and variety of difficulties experienced in both the short and longer terms.
Implications for the treatment of individual children and their
families
We now move to consider the implications of these findings for the
treatment of individual children, and also for the planning of services for
children. Only the key points will be considered.
Treatment of children who have experienced sexual abuse has to occur within the context of the child's circumstances, often including other coexisting difficulties. In particular, the first priority will be the need for safety from further abuse. If resources are limited, treatment efforts should be focused on symptomatic children first, partly because of their burden of suffering, but also because the evidence for non-symptomatic children improving in other ways with treatment is not strong. Longer-term sleeper effects in those children who are asymptomatic soon after abuse has occurred are of concern, but with the current state of knowledge it seems appropriate to target available treatment resources at symptomatic children. This apparent differential response to treatment of asymptomatic and symptomatic children requires further research investigation.
Non-abusing parents and carers should be involved wherever this is possible, particularly when younger children have been abused. A sensitive developmental approach will dictate how the child and non-abusing parent or carer are seen whether together in sessions, separately, or some combination of these. Parental (and particularly maternal) support of the child is crucial, and can be bolstered significantly by professional therapeutic input.
The research evidence points strongly to CBT being the first-line treatment for this group of children and their families, where it is available. In this we are in agreement with previous reviews (Finkelhor & Berliner, 1995; Berliner, 1997; Stevenson, 1999; King et al, 2000). However, the evidence at present is not strong enough to preclude using or recommending other treatment approaches, either where specific factors suggest alternative approaches, or where CBT has failed or is unavailable. A wide range of different treatments are currently used for other kinds of traumatic states in children (Cohen et al, 2001). Particular circumstances that might require the use of other treatment approaches include the treatment of children with comrobid difficulties particularly difficult behavioural problems or significant sexual behaviour problems and the treatment of very young children. However, there is a challenge here to the many treatments offered to these children: they should demonstrate their effectiveness and, more importantly, demonstrate that they do no harm.
We wish to highlight two other relevant clinical issues. First, there needs to be a focus on outreach and active methods of keeping children and families involved with therapeutic treatment. The attrition rates in the studies reviewed here are high, and are likely to be higher in real-life treatment. This is in common with treatment for other forms of child maltreatment (Wolfe, 1995). Second, clinicians need to be alert for persisting emotional disorder, particularly depression (Tebbutt et al, 1997). An assessment of comorbid psychiatric problems should be undertaken, and referral to psychiatric services made if appropriate.
Implications for planning services for a population
Children who have experienced sexual abuse will usually come to
professional attention first through child protection services the
exact mechanisms depending on the country in question. However, sexual abuse
should not be thought of as just a social services and child protection
problem. As we have stressed, this group of children often had multiple
problems, including significant psychiatric difficulties, and so a
multi-disciplinary approach to planning services is crucial. We have
previously suggested that all children who have experienced this type of abuse
might benefit from a psycho-educational intervention
(Jones & Ramchandani,
1999), incorporating some of the elements of the treatment
packages tested in many of the studies reviewed here, such as addressing
issues of responsibility for the abuse, knowledge about sexually abusive
behaviour, and future safety. This type of intervention could successfully be
undertaken by the professionals responsible for the initial intervention
following the recognition of abuse (the social worker in the UK context).
Therapies requiring further training and expertise, including the
cognitivebehavioural therapies, might require either supervision from
specialist child and adolescent mental health services or delivery by them.
Delivery of a service to any area will therefore require an appropriate number
of professionals to have the training and skills to offer CBT to this
vulnerable group of children and adolescents. However, this alone will not
suffice, as not everyone will respond to CBT, so a multi-modal therapeutic
approach will be necessary (Berliner,
1997).
Services will need to orient themselves to involve the non-abusing parent: this will require a deliberate targeting of this group with support and treatment services. Active approaches of this kind must respect individual choice, but will need to address obstacles to care by considering transport issues, child care (e.g. crèches), stigma, and the possibility of meetings in other settings (e.g. community centres). A more proactive approach to outreach and maintaining people within treatment is required. Finally, services for this group of children and families need to have a long-term orientation. A service offering only shortterm, symptom-driven packages of care will miss children who present at later dates. That is not to say that these children need to remain in therapy for long periods (some might do, but the evidence does not suggest that the majority would benefit from this); it is more to suggest that a significant group of these children may experience enduring problems such as depression or the later onset of problems.
Child sexual abuse can be a horrific experience in the life of a child. Increasingly, experience supports the contention that therapeutic treatments may help such children and their families, but services will have to be more clearly oriented to their needs.
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Clinical Implications and Limitations |
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LIMITATIONS
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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Received for publication February 17, 2003. Revision received May 22, 2003. Accepted for publication June 12, 2003.