Internet-based therapy relieves persistent tinnitus
March 2012
Those suffering from nagging tinnitus can benefit from internet-based
therapy just as much as patients who take part in group therapy sessions.
These are the findings of a German-Swedish study in which patients with
moderate to severe tinnitus tried out various forms of therapy over a
ten-week period. The outcome of both the internet-based therapy and group
therapy sessions was significantly better than that of a control group that
only participated in an online discussion forum and thus demonstrated both
the former to be effective methods of managing the symptoms of irritating
ringing in the ears. The study was conducted by the Clinical Psychology and
Psychotherapy division of the Institute of Psychology at Johannes Gutenberg
University Mainz (JGU) and the Department of Behavioral Sciences and
Learning at Linköping University in Sweden.
According to the German Tinnitus League (Deutsche Tinnitus-Liga, DTL),
two percent of the population suffer from moderate to unbearable tinnitus.
But the symptoms of tinnitus can be successfully managed by means of
cognitive behavioral therapy. However, not everyone has the opportunity or
the desire to take a course of psychotherapy. As shown by the German-Swedish
study, those affected by tinnitus can now achieve the same level of outcome
with the help of an internet-based therapy program, which encourages them to
adopt individual and active strategies to combat their tinnitus. For the
purposes of the study, the training program developed in Sweden was adapted
so that it could be used for German patients and then be evaluated for its
effectiveness.
The study showed that distress measured using the Tinnitus Handicap
Inventory was reduced on average from moderate (40 points) to mild (29
points) in participants who completed the internet-based training course.
The results for subjects in the cognitive behavioral therapy group were also
very good, with distress levels being reduced from 44 to 29 points. In
contrast, there was hardly any change in this respect in the control group
subjects participating in the online discussion forum. Their average
distress level was 40 points at the beginning of the study and remained at
37 points thereafter. "Our internet-based therapy concept was very effective
when it came to the reduction of tinnitus-related distress or, to put it
another way, at increasing the tolerance levels of subjects with regard to
their tinnitus," concludes Dr. Maria Kleinstäuber of the Clinical Psychology
and Psychotherapy division at JGU.
At the same time, another interesting result was produced with regard to
the preferred method of therapy. A significant number of subjects were
initially skeptical with regard to the internet-based therapy concept and
expressed a preference for the group therapy course. However, they were
randomly assigned to the groups. To everyone's surprise it turned out on the
completion of treatment that there was no difference in the effectiveness of
the two strategies. "This means that the internet-based therapy concept
produced as positive a result as group therapy despite the initial
skepticism," says Kleinstäuber. Initial evaluations indicate that the
effects of both therapy forms were still persisting after six months.
The authors of the study propose that internet-based forms of therapy
should be increasingly used in the psychotherapeutic treatment of tinnitus
patients. Furthermore, they call for additional research on patients'
skepticism of internet-based therapy, particularly in view of the long
waiting times and the lack of outpatient forms of therapy.
SOURCE: Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU)