Benefits and harms of interventions to improve anxiety, depression, and other mental health outcomes for autistic people: A systematic review and network meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the benefits and harms of different interventions, including mindfulness therapy, on mental health outcomes in autistic people.
Results Summary
The study found that some forms of mindfulness therapy may be helpful for autistic people without intellectual disability, but further research is necessary. The trials did not report long-term effects or efficacy for those with intellectual disability.
Population
Autistic people, specifically those without intellectual disability.
Effective Dosage
Not available
Duration
Short-term (exact duration not specified)
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
some forms of cognitive behavioural therapy | increase | mental health outcomes | autistic people without intellectual disability | - | may be helpful | #1 |
mindfulness therapy | increase | mental health outcomes | autistic people without intellectual disability | - | may be helpful | #2 |
medications to target core features of autism | no change | mental health conditions | autistic people | - | did not help | #3 |
Nearly three out of four autistic people experience mental health problems such as stress, anxiety or depression. The research already done does not guide us on how best to prevent or treat mental health problems for autistic people. Our aim was to look at the benefits and harms of different interventions on mental health outcomes in autistic people. We searched all the published randomised controlled trials (RCTs) about interventions for mental health conditions in autistic people until 17 October 2020. We also searched for RCTs that were not published in peer-reviewed journals. These were obtained from registers of clinical trials online. We then combined the information from all these trials using advanced statistical methods to analyse how good the interventions are. Seventy-one studies (3630 participants) provided information for this research. The studies reported how participants were responding to the intervention for only a short period of time. The trials did not report which interventions worked for people with intellectual disability. In people without intellectual disability, some forms of cognitive behavioural therapy and mindfulness therapy may be helpful. However, further research is necessary. Many trials used medications to target core features of autism rather than targeting mental health conditions, but these medications did not help autistic people. Until we have more evidence, treatment of mental health conditions in autistic people should follow the evidence available for non-autistic people. We plan to widely disseminate the findings to healthcare professionals through medical journals and conferences and contact other groups representing autistic people.