Review Quality Rating: 9 (strong)
Citation: Bellon J.A., Moreno-Peral P., Motrico E., Rodriguez-Morejon A., Fernandez A., Serrano-Blanco A., et al. (2015). Effectiveness of psychological and/or educational interventions to prevent the onset of episodes of depression: A systematic review of systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Preventive Medicine, 76, S22-S32.
Evidence Summary PubMed LinkOut Plain-language summary
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effectiveness of psychological and/or educational interventions to prevent the onset of episodes of depression.
METHODS: Systematic review of systematic reviews and meta-analyses (SR/MA). We searched PubMed, PsycINFO, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, OpenGrey, and PROSPERO from their inception until February 2014. Two reviewers independently evaluated the eligibility criteria of all SR/MA, abstracted data, and determined bias risk (AMSTAR).
RESULTS: Twelve SR/MA (156 non-repeated trials and 56,158 participants) were included. Of these, 142 (91%) were randomized-controlled, 13 (8.3%) controlled trials, and 1 (0.6%) had no control group. Five SR/MA focused on children and adolescents, four on specific populations (women after childbirth, of low socioeconomic status, or unfavorable circumstances; patients with severe traumatic physical injuries or stroke) and three addressed the general population. Nine (75%) SR/MA concluded that interventions to prevent depression were effective. Of the 156 trials, 137 (87.8%) reported some kind of effect size calculation. Effect sizes were small in 45 (32.8%), medium in 26 (19.1%), and large in 25 (18.2%) trials; 41 (29.9%) trials were not effective. Of the 141 trials for which follow-up periods were available, only 34 (24.1%) exceeded 12. months.
CONCLUSION: Psychological and/or educational interventions to prevent onset of episodes of depression were effective, although most had small or medium effect sizes.
Adolescents, Adults, Community, Education, Awareness & Skill Development or Training, Grade School Aged, Health Care Setting, Home, Mental Health & Wellness, Meta-analysis, Older Adults, Preschool Aged, Social Support