Turtle Louise, Wesson Helen Alexandra, Williamson Simon, Hodson Nathan
Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Gibbett Hill Road, Coventry, CV4 7AL, United Kingdom, 44 2476574880.
Department of Brain Sciences, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
JMIR Form Res. 2025 Jul 30;9:e66884. doi: 10.2196/66884.
Every year, around 1.8 million people in the United Kingdom are referred to NHS Talking Therapies, predominantly for cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), which is the first-line treatment for common affective and anxiety disorders. However, more than a million of these do not complete their course. Supporting this "missing million" to attend and complete CBT is a policy priority.
We aimed to coproduce a series of video resources to help patients better prepare for and complete their CBT sessions.
We structured this project around a development cycle and documented outcomes against the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) checklist to ensure transparent intervention reporting. We assembled an interdisciplinary team to undertake an iterative video development process, composed of 3 subteams. An expert contributor subteam of 21 therapists shared their priorities and preferences for video content and style. A creative subteam of 4 members was responsible for scripting, filming, and editing video content. A project management subteam comprising 4 members (2 project managers, 1 designer, and 1 psychiatrist) distilled insights from the expert contributors and shared them with the creative team; they also presented video content to expert contributors and collected feedback. The process was terminated when expert contributors were satisfied that the videos developed could be shared with their patients.
We conducted 2 development cycles over 7 months between February and August 2024. In total, we produced 12 short-form videos, each 1 minute 14 seconds to 4 minutes 46 seconds long, across 4 distinct presentation styles (animation, patient narrative, therapist vignette, and expert interview). Videos covered topics such as the format of CBT (eg, why there is work to do between therapy sessions) and the psychological content (the value of developing healthy habits). Between 4 and 11 expert contributors reviewed any given batch of videos. Based on early feedback, we removed checklist formats in favor of positive storytelling, slowed pacing, and added subtitles to ensure readability and reduce cognitive load. The termination condition was achieved; expert contributors agreed to share videos with their patients.
We successfully collaborated to produce a series of psychoeducation videos. A major strength of this process was the large number of people from different professional backgrounds involved; this diversity boosted both the validity of the content and the creativeness of the videos. This approach was well-suited to the setting of psychotherapy, where therapists have a detailed understanding of the anxieties and uncertainties of their patients, but we would advise caution in fields where professionals are less attuned to their patients' needs. Support to engage the "missing million" is urgently needed, and psychoeducational videos provide one suitable approach.
在英国,每年约有180万人被转介至国民健康服务体系(NHS)的谈话治疗服务,主要接受认知行为疗法(CBT),这是常见情感和焦虑障碍的一线治疗方法。然而,其中超过100万人未能完成疗程。支持这“缺失的100万”患者参与并完成认知行为疗法是一项政策重点。
我们旨在共同制作一系列视频资源,以帮助患者更好地为认知行为疗法疗程做准备并完成疗程。
我们围绕一个开发周期构建了这个项目,并对照干预描述与复制模板(TIDieR)清单记录结果,以确保干预报告的透明度。我们组建了一个跨学科团队来进行迭代视频开发过程,该团队由3个子团队组成。一个由21名治疗师组成的专家贡献者子团队分享了他们对视频内容和风格的优先事项和偏好。一个由4名成员组成的创意子团队负责编写脚本、拍摄和编辑视频内容。一个由4名成员(2名项目经理、1名设计师和1名精神科医生)组成的项目管理子团队提炼了专家贡献者的见解并与创意团队分享;他们还向专家贡献者展示视频内容并收集反馈。当专家贡献者对所开发的视频可以与他们的患者分享感到满意时,该过程终止。
在2024年2月至8月的7个月期间,我们进行了2个开发周期。我们总共制作了12个短视频,每个视频时长1分14秒至4分46秒,涵盖4种不同的呈现风格(动画、患者叙述、治疗师小品和专家访谈)。视频涵盖了认知行为疗法的形式(例如,为什么在治疗疗程之间需要做工作)和心理内容(养成健康习惯的价值)等主题。每一批视频都有4至11名专家贡献者进行评审。根据早期反馈,我们去掉了清单形式,采用积极的故事叙述方式,放慢节奏,并添加字幕以确保可读性并减轻认知负担。达到了终止条件;专家贡献者同意与他们的患者分享视频。
我们成功合作制作了一系列心理教育视频。这个过程的一个主要优势是有大量来自不同专业背景的人员参与;这种多样性提高了内容有效性和视频的创造性。这种方法非常适合心理治疗环境,在这种环境中治疗师对患者的焦虑和不确定性有详细了解,但在专业人员对患者需求不太敏感的领域,我们建议谨慎使用。迫切需要支持让“缺失的100万”患者参与进来,心理教育视频提供了一种合适的方法。