Online Anxiety Treament Programs: Assessment of Acceptability to Consumers

Online treatment programs are shown to be effective in the treatment of anxiety and can address some of the reasons people do not seek treatment. Little is known, however, about their acceptability, which relates to the seeking out and persistence in a program, by possible consumers, and in particul...

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Main Author: Snelson, Stephanie Anne
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Psychology 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6724
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-67242015-03-30T15:30:55ZOnline Anxiety Treament Programs: Assessment of Acceptability to ConsumersSnelson, Stephanie AnneOnline treatment programs are shown to be effective in the treatment of anxiety and can address some of the reasons people do not seek treatment. Little is known, however, about their acceptability, which relates to the seeking out and persistence in a program, by possible consumers, and in particular the acceptability of certain components of the programs. To address this gap in the literature 234 students from the University of Canterbury rated the acceptability of Feedback in a described online program for a hypothetical individual suffering from anxiety. Using the same program and hypothetical individual, 72 students rated the acceptability of accessibility to feedback. Feedback Delay was the only significant variable found to influence acceptability. The program was rated as having medium acceptability and the study suggests that efforts should be made in online anxiety treatment programs to get feedback (of any kind) back to the user within 20minutes as this has the greatest influence on acceptability.University of Canterbury. Psychology2012-07-11T04:19:58Z2012-07-11T04:19:58Z2012Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/6724enNZCUCopyright Stephanie Anne Snelsonhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
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language en
sources NDLTD
description Online treatment programs are shown to be effective in the treatment of anxiety and can address some of the reasons people do not seek treatment. Little is known, however, about their acceptability, which relates to the seeking out and persistence in a program, by possible consumers, and in particular the acceptability of certain components of the programs. To address this gap in the literature 234 students from the University of Canterbury rated the acceptability of Feedback in a described online program for a hypothetical individual suffering from anxiety. Using the same program and hypothetical individual, 72 students rated the acceptability of accessibility to feedback. Feedback Delay was the only significant variable found to influence acceptability. The program was rated as having medium acceptability and the study suggests that efforts should be made in online anxiety treatment programs to get feedback (of any kind) back to the user within 20minutes as this has the greatest influence on acceptability.
author Snelson, Stephanie Anne
spellingShingle Snelson, Stephanie Anne
Online Anxiety Treament Programs: Assessment of Acceptability to Consumers
author_facet Snelson, Stephanie Anne
author_sort Snelson, Stephanie Anne
title Online Anxiety Treament Programs: Assessment of Acceptability to Consumers
title_short Online Anxiety Treament Programs: Assessment of Acceptability to Consumers
title_full Online Anxiety Treament Programs: Assessment of Acceptability to Consumers
title_fullStr Online Anxiety Treament Programs: Assessment of Acceptability to Consumers
title_full_unstemmed Online Anxiety Treament Programs: Assessment of Acceptability to Consumers
title_sort online anxiety treament programs: assessment of acceptability to consumers
publisher University of Canterbury. Psychology
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/6724
work_keys_str_mv AT snelsonstephanieanne onlineanxietytreamentprogramsassessmentofacceptabilitytoconsumers
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