Effectiveness of Psychotherapy Synthesis of a “Meta-Analytic Research Domain” Across World Regions and 12 Mental Health Problems

Authors
  • Mathias Harrer
  • Clara Miguel
  • Wouter van Ballegooijen
  • Marketa Ciharova
  • Constantin Yves Plessen
  • Paula Kuper
  • Antonia A. Sprenger
  • Claudia Buntrock
  • Davide Papola
  • Ioana A. Cristea
  • Nino de Ponti
  • Đorđe Bašić
  • Darin Pauley
  • Ellen Driessen
  • Soledad Quero
  • Jorge Grimaldos
  • Sara Fernández Buendía
  • Cristina Botella
  • Jessica L. Hamblen
  • Paula P. Schnurr
  • Sadie E. Larsen
  • Rory A. Pfund
  • Emma Motrico
  • Irene Gómez-Gómez
  • Kim Setkowski
  • Minoo Matbouriahi
  • Yingying Wang
  • Josine Rawee
  • Heleen Riper
  • Annemieke van Straten
  • Marit Sijbrandij
  • Stefan Leucht
  • Toshi A. Furukawa
  • Eirini Karyotaki
  • Pim Cuijpers
Publication date 05-2025
Journal Psychological Bulletin
Volume | Issue number 151 | 5
Pages (from-to) 600-667
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
The scientific output generated in psychology has surged in recent decades, including the number of studies investigating psychological treatments. To keep track of all this evidence, we developed the “Metapsy” meta-analytic research domain: a comprehensive system of open databases and tailored software that allows for rapid evidence generation. We leverage this novel infrastructure to summarize the effect of psychological treatment across 12 mental health problems and trace back the global expansion of psychotherapy research over the past 50 years. Including 1,029 studies with 85,952 patients, our results indicate small to moderate average benefits in treating psychosis (g = 0.32), suicidal ideation (g = 0.34), borderline personality disorder (g = 0.46), and prolonged grief (g = 0.49). In contrast, psychological interventions have large average effects on depression (g = 0.73), problem gambling (g = 0.80), panic (g = 0.83), generalized anxiety (g = 0.86), social anxiety (g = 0.95), obsessive–compulsive (g = 1.18), posttraumatic stress disorder (g = 1.18), and phobias (g = 1.25). Most available evidence (83.4%–86.1%) comes from high-income and Western countries, but their dominance is declining. We found no indication that psychotherapy is less effective in low- and middle-income countries (g = 0.38–2.41) or non-Western cultures (g = 0.74–2.20). We discuss ways to further enhance psychotherapy’s public health impact, as well as how the meta-analytic research domain concept may be extended to other types of psychological research in the future.
Document type Article
Note With supplemental material
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1037/bul0000465
Published at https://ovidsp.ovid.com/ovidweb.cgi?T=JS&CSC=Y&NEWS=N&PAGE=fulltext&AN=00006823-202505000-00004&LSLINK=80&D=ovft
Other links https://osf.io/ha745 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.11116214 https://github.com/MathiasHarrer/supersizing-meta-analysis https://doi.org/10.1037/bul0000465.supp https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105008587280
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