INSPIREE: Indonesian Sport Innovation Review
Vol. 6 No. 02 (2025): May 27, 2025

Integration of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy with Adaptive Swimming Instruction for Children with Water-Related Anxiety Disorders: A Randomised Controlled Trial

Swandana, Atika (Unknown)
Ahmad , Nadhira Yasmine (Unknown)
Trinanda , Aditya (Unknown)
Al Azim, Al Azim (Unknown)
Porto , Jerome Angelitud (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
27 May 2025

Abstract

The  purpose  of  the study. To evaluate the effectiveness of an integrated swimming instruction program combining cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) principles with adaptive aquatic techniques for children with water-related anxiety disorders, comparing outcomes with traditional swimming instruction methods. Materials and methods. A randomized controlled trial involving 120 children aged 6-12 years with diagnosed anxiety disorders featuring water-related fears di kota Medan, Indonesia, Indonesia. Participants were assigned to either an intervention group (n=60) receiving specialized anxiety-focused instruction or a control group (n=60) receiving standard swimming lessons. The 12-week program included twice-weekly 45-minute sessions. Outcomes were measured using the Water Anxiety Scale for Children (WASC-R), Swimming Competency Assessment Tool (SCAT), Behavioral Observation Scale (BOS), and parent-reported anxiety measures (SCARED questionnaire). Results. The intervention group showed significantly greater improvements across all measures: anxiety reduction (68% vs 23% in controls), swimming competency (82% vs 45%), and avoidance behaviors (85% vs 35% reduction). Program completion rates were higher in the intervention group (95% vs 82%). At 3-month follow-up, the intervention group maintained superior outcomes in anxiety reduction (92% maintenance), swimming skills (88%), and water confidence (90%) compared to controls (76%, 70%, and 65% respectively). Conclusions. The integrated anxiety-focused swimming instruction approach significantly outperforms traditional methods for children with water-related anxiety disorders, producing superior outcomes in both psychological and physical domains while maintaining higher program adherence rates. This approach should be considered the standard of care for anxiety-affected populations in aquatic education.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

inspiree

Publisher

Subject

Humanities Education Health Professions Public Health Social Sciences

Description

INSPIREE: Indonesian Sport Innovation Review is an journal which provides a focal point for the publication of social science research on Sport and the wide range of associated Sport Education, Sports achievements, Sport history, Sport social, Sport cultural, Sport law, political, sport tourism, ...