Treatment of selective mutism: a 5-year follow-up study

Beate Oerbeck, Kristin Romvig Overgaard, Murray B Stein, Are Hugo Pripp, Hanne Kristensen, Beate Oerbeck, Kristin Romvig Overgaard, Murray B Stein, Are Hugo Pripp, Hanne Kristensen

Abstract

Selective mutism (SM) has been defined as an anxiety disorder in the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM-5). Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is the recommended approach for SM, but prospective long-term outcome studies are lacking. Reports from the children themselves, and the use of more global quality of life measures, are also missing in the literature. We have developed a school-based CBT intervention previously found to increase speech in a pilot efficacy study and a randomized controlled treatment study. Continued progress was found in our 1-year follow-up studies, where older age and more severe SM had a significant negative effect upon outcome. In the present study, we provide 5-year outcome data for 30 of these 32 children with SM who completed the same CBT for mean 21 weeks (sd 5, range 8-24) at mean age 6 years (10 boys). Mean age at the 5-year follow-up was 11 years (range 8-14). Outcome measures were diagnostic status, the teacher- and parent-rated selective mutism questionnaires, and child rated quality of life and speaking behavior. At the 5-year follow-up, 21 children were in full remission, five were in partial remission and four fulfilled diagnostic criteria for SM. Seven children (23%) fulfilled criteria for social phobia, and separation anxiety disorder, specific phobia and/or enuresis nocturna were found in a total of five children (17%). Older age and severity at baseline and familial SM were significant negative predictors of outcome. Treatment gains were maintained on the teacher- and parent questionnaires. The children rated their overall quality of life as good. Although most of them talked outside of home, 50% still experienced it as somewhat challenging. These results point to the long-term effectiveness of CBT for SM, but also highlight the need to develop more effective interventions for the subset of children with persistent symptoms.Clinical trials registration NCT01002196.

Keywords: CBT; Child anxiety; Quality of life; Selective mutism; Self-report.

Conflict of interest statement

On behalf of all authors, the corresponding author states that there is no conflict of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Mean scores on the parent rated SMQ total score and the teacher-rated SSQ over time, at baseline (T1), after 3 months of treatment (T2) end of treatment; 6 months (T3), 1 year after end of treatment (T4) and after 5 years (T5)
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
The percentage of problems on the ILC subscales for children in the present study (SM, n = 28) versus a sample of Norwegian schoolchildren [44] (Ctr, n = 1987)

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Source: PubMed

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