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Psychosocial Treatments for Bipolar Disorder in Children and Adolescents

Haley M. Brickman, Mary A. Fristad

2022Annual Review of Clinical Psychology28 citationsDOI

Abstract

Evidence suggests that adjunctive psychosocial intervention for the treatment of pediatric bipolar spectrum disorders (BPSDs) is effective, feasible, and highly accepted as both an acute and maintenance treatment for youth with BPSD diagnoses as well as a preventive treatment for high-risk youth who are either asymptomatic or exhibit subsyndromal mood symptoms. Here, we provide a comprehensive review of all known evidence-based interventions, including detailed descriptions of treatment targets and core components, results of clinical trials, and updated research on mediators and moderators of treatment efficacy. Treatments are presented systematically according to level of empirical support (i.e., well established, probably efficacious, possibly efficacious, experimental, or questionable); upcoming and ongoing trials are included when possible. In line with a staging approach, preventive interventions are presented separately. Recommendations for best practices based on age, stage, and additional evidence-based child and family factors shown to affect treatment outcomes are provided.

Topics & Concepts

PsychosocialPsychological interventionBipolar disorderIntervention (counseling)MoodClinical psychologyPsychiatryPsychologyMedicineMood disordersAnxietyBipolar Disorder and TreatmentAdolescent and Pediatric HealthcareChild and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development
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