qualitative study of perceptions and acceptability of unguided internet cognitive behavior therapy for grieving adolescents.
Egan SJ., O'Brien AB., Bills E., Pauley-Gadd SB., Callaghan T., Raghav S., Payne NC., Myers B., Hall C., Wilson H., Eisma MC., Boelen PA., Smith KV., Wild J., Duffy M., Trickey D., Breen LJ.
Grief is a common experience in adolescence. Evidence-based therapies are not readily accessible for grieving young people. Unguided internet-based cognitive behavior therapy for grief in adolescents has recently been investigated in a pilot randomized controlled trial. Research is required to determine acceptability as this unguided internet intervention incorporates exposure and imagery transformation techniques that are typically delivered by therapists. The aim of this study was to understand, through qualitative content analysis, adolescents' views about the acceptability of unguided internet-based cognitive behavior therapy for grief. Nine adolescents (M age = 16.44 years, SD = 1.13, age range 14-18 years, 55.6% female, 44.4% male) engaged in a post-intervention interview, or provided written responses to the interview questions, after trial participation. Most participants reported exposure and imagery transformation as acceptable. The findings provide initial support in a small sample of adolescents of the acceptability of unguided internet cognitive behavior therapy for grief.