JMIR Mental Health (May 2015)

Adjustment Disorders Are Uniquely Suited for eHealth Interventions: Concept and Case Study

  • Maercker, Andreas,
  • Bachem, Rahel C,
  • Lorenz, Louisa,
  • Moser, Christian T,
  • Berger, Thomas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/mental.4157
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 2
p. e15

Abstract

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BackgroundAdjustment disorders (also known as mental distress in response to a stressor) are among the most frequently diagnosed mental disorders in psychiatry and clinical psychology worldwide. They are also commonly diagnosed in clients engaging in deliberate self-harm and in those consulting general practitioners. However, their reputation in research-oriented mental health remains weak since they are largely underresearched. This may change when the International Statistical Classification of Diseases-11 (ICD-11) by the World Health Organization is introduced, including a new conceptualization of adjustment disorders as a stress-response disorder with positively defined core symptoms. ObjectiveThis paper provides an overview of evidence-based interventions for adjustment disorders. MethodsWe reviewed the new ICD-11 concept of adjustment disorder and discuss the the rationale and case study of an unguided self-help protocol for burglary victims with adjustment disorder, and its possible implementation as an eHealth intervention. ResultsOverall, the treatment with the self-help manual reduced symptoms of adjustment disorder, namely preoccupation and failure to adapt, as well as symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress. ConclusionsE-mental health options are considered uniquely suited for offering early intervention after the experiences of stressful life events that potentially trigger adjustment disorders.