By City News Service
Apr 15, 2021
LOS ANGELES (CNS) - The Children s Hospital Los Angeles announced today it received $6.1 million to conduct research into the success of treatments for children s anxiety, which affects one in five youth.
The study, which is funded through the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, will be the first to measure the success rates of cognitive behavioral therapy and medication, the two common treatments for children with anxiety.
“There hasn t yet been a head-to-head comparison for treatment strategies in real-world settings, said Dr. Bradley Peterson, chief in the division of child psychiatry at CHLA. “We are excited to be able to lay this foundation and finally answer these questions.
Each treatment has shown some success in treating patients, but when children don t go into remission, medical professionals have to decide whether to continue with an intensified version of current treatment or add another treatment.
Clinicians and families also have to consider the cost and the time commitment of therapy when considering it against medications.
“This is a clinical question for every single child who is treated for anxiety across the world,” Peterson said. “Many factors go into the decision of whether to begin with CBT or medication.”
Peterson will collaborate with the U.S. leading experts in youth anxiety to compare the two treatment options success rates. In the study s first phase, researchers will randomly give participants therapy or medication then assess them for 12 weeks.
1. Rep. Marie Poulson reflects on 12 years of health reform
A member of the state’s Health Care Reform Task Force since its inception 12 years ago, Rep. Marie Poulson (Cottonwood Heights) has had a front row seat to the evolution of Utah health care since. As she nears retirement in 2021, Poulson spoke with reporter Eli Kirshbaum about the long fight for Medicaid expansion, her criticisms of the Herbert administration and expectations for the Cox administration, and her concerns as Utah begins distributing COVID vaccines.
“I know during my twelve years serving as a legislator, with the rancor coming down from our current administration, a lot of more ‘in-your-face’ partisanship, I have seen it filter down to the states in the last few years … I really am pretty positive, in spite of the fact that we have this huge supermajority in the state, that most people will rise to the occasion, knowing what a terrible economic toll the pandemic has taken on people and that