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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Many aspects of the treatment for adolescent
depression
are still uncertain. However, our body of knowledge continues to accumulate, and our approaches continue to be refined. When we remember that 40 years ago the field was still arguing about the existence of
depression
in youth, it is clear that significant progress has been made. Recent controversies have provided another opportunity to step back and re-evaluate. Given the chronicity, morbidity, and mortality associated with adolescent
depression
, the risks of doing nothing are too great. Evidence-based research has provided us with some direction during this unsettling time. After careful reviews, the major professional organizations representing pediatric medicine and psychiatry all support the continued use of SSRI antidepressant medications but emphasize close monitoring. The debates also have heightened interest in effective psychotherapy approaches, particularly
CBT
and IPT. Given the risk for suicidality in depressed adolescents, assessment and management of safety concerns remain critical, regardless of medication usage. Above all, it is most important that we remain hopeful about our ability to guide adolescents and families through the struggles with
depression
toward recovery.
...
PMID:Adolescent depression: challenges and opportunities: a review and current recommendations for clinical practice. 1708 65
The treatment of chronic and recurrent
depression
is a priority for the development of new interventions. The maintenance of residual symptoms following acute treatment for
depression
is a risk factor for both chronic
depression
and further relapse/recurrence. This open case series provides the first data on a cognitive-behavioural treatment for residual
depression
that explicitly targets depressive rumination. Rumination has been identified as a key factor in the onset and maintenance of
depression
, which is found to remain elevated following remission from
depression
. Fourteen consecutively recruited participants meeting criteria for medication--refractory residual
depression
[Paykel, E.S., Scott, J., Teasdale, J.D., Johnson, A.L., Garland, A., Moore, R. et al., 1999. Prevention of relapse in residual
depression
by cognitive therapy--a controlled trial. Archives of General Psychiatry 56, 829-835] were treated individually for up to 12 weekly 60-min sessions. Treatment specifically focused on switching patients from less helpful to more helpful styles of thinking through the use of functional analysis, experiential/imagery exercises and behavioural experiments. Treatment produced significant improvements in depressive symptoms, rumination and co-morbid disorders: 71% responded (50% reduction on Hamilton
Depression
Rating Scale) and 50% achieved full remission. Treating depressive rumination appears to yield generalised improvement in
depression
and co-morbidity. This study provides preliminary evidence that rumination-focused
CBT
may be an efficacious treatment for medication--refractory residual
depression
.
...
PMID:Rumination-focused cognitive behaviour therapy for residual depression: a case series. 1736 51
Within psychological services in Primary Care, service providers are expected and required to deliver clinical services that are prompt, safe and effective. However, long wait-times for treatment are common, with attendant clinical chronicity and risk issues. Evaluations of group-based treatments in Primary Care, which are clinically more efficient than individual treatments, are extremely scarce. The current evaluation attempted to appraise the effectiveness of a service innovation of introducing group-based psychoeducational cognitive-behaviour therapy (
CBT
; N=43), by comparing outcomes with clients treated in individual
CBT
(N=68) and individual psychodynamic-interpersonal psychotherapy (N=65). Group psychoeducational participants completed validated scales of psychological functioning (Beck
Depression
Inventory - 2, BDI-2; Brief Symptom Inventory, BSI; Inventory of Interpersonal Problems, IIP-32; and General Health Questionnaire, GHQ-12) at assessment, start of group, termination of group and 3-month follow-up, whereas participants in the individual therapies completed measures only at initiation and termination of treatment. The results indicate broad similarities between the outcomes achieved by the three services, with rates of clinically significant improvements and deteriorations comparable in the main across services. The results are discussed in terms of identified methodological limitations, service implications and models of service delivery for the psychological therapies in Primary Care.
...
PMID:Delivering group psychoeducational CBT in Primary Care: comparing outcomes with individual CBT and individual psychodynamic-interpersonal psychotherapy. 1752 14
The present study examined the relationship between therapeutic alliance and both
depression
and health outcomes in a randomized clinical trial of 2 telephone-administered treatments with 97 clients with multiple sclerosis (MS). The 16-week, manualized treatments compared were telephone-administered cognitive-behavioral therapy (T-CBT) and telephone-administered supportive emotion focused therapy (T-SEFT), an experiential treatment. Alliance scores were significantly higher in T-
CBT
compared with T-SEFT, and treatment moderated the relationship between alliance and outcome on some of the measures. Specifically, alliance predicted subsequent improvements in
depression
within the T-
CBT
condition, but not in T-SEFT, controlling for early symptom change. The authors found a similar trend for alliance and MS-related disability in T-
CBT
only. This is one of the first studies to examine the role of alliance in outcome for the emerging modality of telephone therapy and one of the few to relate alliance to health outcomes. The findings suggest that the therapist-client relationship is important to improvement in telephone therapy and that the role of alliance in outcome may vary by treatment approach.
...
PMID:Alliance in two telephone-administered treatments: relationship with depression and health outcomes. 1756 67
Although the cessation of substance use is the principal concern of drug treatment programs, many individuals in treatment experience co-occurring problems such as mood disruptions and sexual risk behaviors that may complicate their recovery process. This study assessed relationships among dynamic changes tracked over time in methamphetamine use,
depression
symptoms, and sexual risk behaviors (unprotected anal intercourse) in a sample of 145 methamphetamine-dependent gay and bisexual males enrolled in a 16-week outpatient drug treatment research program. Participants were randomly assigned into 1 of 4 conditions: contingency management (CM), cognitive behavioral therapy (
CBT
; the control condition), combined CM and
CBT
, and a tailored gay-specific version of the
CBT
condition. Using latent growth curve models, the authors assessed the relationship of means (intercepts) and the slopes of the 3 measures of interest over time to test whether changes in methamphetamine use predicted declining rates of
depression
and risky sexual behavior in tandem. Participants with the greatest downward trajectory in methamphetamine use (urine verified) reported the greatest and quickest decreases in reported depressive symptoms and sexual risk behaviors. The control group reported the most methamphetamine use over the 16 weeks; the tailored gay-specific group reported a more rapidly decreasing slope in methamphetamine use than the other participants. Findings indicate that lowering methamphetamine use itself has a concurrent and synergistic effect on depressive symptoms and risky sexual behavior patterns. This suggests that some users who respond well to treatment may show improvement in these co-occurring problems without a need for more intensive targeted interventions.
...
PMID:Depression ratings, reported sexual risk behaviors, and methamphetamine use: latent growth curve models of positive change among gay and bisexual men in an outpatient treatment program. 1756 17
The prevalence of co-morbid
depression
in people with intellectual disability (ID) provides a strong rationale for the early identification and treatment of individuals at risk. The aim of this study was to evaluate a staff-administered group
CBT
program for the treatment of
depression
in people with mild ID. A sample of 13 staff employed at two community-based disability agencies were trained to deliver the program to 47 individuals with mild ID and symptoms of
depression
. A wait list control group comprised of 27 individuals subsequently completed the program. Compared to the control group, individuals who had participated in the treatment program showed lower
depression
scores, and fewer automatic negative thoughts. Furthermore, these changes were maintained at a 3-month follow-up. The results indicate that staff can be trained to deliver a
CBT
program within community settings that is effective in the reduction of
depression
symptomatology in people with mild ID.
...
PMID:Depression in people with intellectual disability: an evaluation of a staff-administered treatment program. 1798 Oct 10
This study compared Panic Online (PO), an internet-based
CBT
intervention, to best-practice face-to-face
CBT
for people with panic disorder with or without agoraphobia. Eighty-six people with a primary diagnosis of panic disorder were recruited from Victoria, Australia. Participants were randomly assigned to either PO (n=46) or best practice face-to-face
CBT
(n=40). Effects of the internet-based
CBT
program were found to be comparable to those of face-to-face
CBT
. Both interventions produced significant reductions in panic disorder and agoraphobia clinician severity ratings, self reported panic disorder severity and panic attack frequency, measures of
depression
, anxiety, stress and panic related cognitions, and displayed improvements in quality of life. Participants rated both treatment conditions as equally credible and satisfying. Participants in the face-to-face
CBT
treatment group cited higher enjoyment with communicating with their therapist. Consistent with this, therapists' ratings for compliance to treatment and understanding of the
CBT
material was higher in the face-to-face
CBT
treatment group. PO required significantly less therapist time than the face-to-face
CBT
condition.
...
PMID:Is internet-based CBT for panic disorder and agoraphobia as effective as face-to-face CBT? 1828 29
This study examines a pilot school-based treatment program for American Indian adolescents residing on a reservation who presented with symptoms of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and symptoms of
depression
. This is the first study directed at treating American Indian children with trauma; seven case studies demonstrate our findings that a manualized cognitive behavior therapy intervention delivered in group format for 10 weeks has potential for helping some children who experience PTSD symptoms and
depression
. The findings generally replicate previous research conducted with groups of non-Indian adolescents in urban settings. PTSD and depressive symptoms decreased for three of the four students who completed treatment. Directions for future research include the need to understand and control attrition and to address cultural influences, including making adaptations in the cognitive behavioral formulations and techniques regarding feelings as operant behaviors. Results contribute to knowledge of feasibility and acceptability of cultural adaptations of
CBT
for trauma in an under-served population.
...
PMID:Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools (CBITS): school-based treatment on a rural American Indian reservation. 1883 78
Aim of the study was to evaluate the clinical characteristics and the treatment outcome of underweight patients with eating disorder (ED) not otherwise specified without amenorrhea (EDNOS-WA), compared with classical anorexia nervosa (AN) cases. Seventy-three consecutive female patients (57 AN, and 16 EDNOS-WA) were evaluated before and after a 20-week cognitive behaviour inpatient treatment (CBT-I). Assessment included anthropometry, the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE), the Beck
Depression
Inventory (BDI), the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI), and the Temperament and Character Inventory (TCI). At logistic regression analysis, amenorrhea was only predicted by baseline BMI and intense exercise, not by psychopathological variables. Response to
CBT
-I was good and similar between groups, without differences in the dropout rate or time-to-dropout. Our data lend support to the hypothesis that the criterion "amenorrhea" is of no clinical utility in the diagnosis and treatment of AN and could be removed in the forthcoming DSM-V proposal.
...
PMID:Is amenorrhea a clinically useful criterion for the diagnosis of anorexia nervosa? 1884 97
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of treating
depression
with coping-oriented couples therapy (COCT) as compared with cognitive-behavioral therapy (
CBT
; A. T. Beck, C. Ward, & M. Mendelson, 1961) and interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT; M. M. Weissman, J. C. Markowitz, & G. L. Klerman, 2000). Sixty couples, including 1 clinically depressed partner, completed pre- and posttest questionnaires as well as follow-up assessments at 6-month intervals over the subsequent 1.5 years. Effects of the 3 treatments on depressive symptomatology assessed by the Beck
Depression
Inventory (A. T. Beck, A. J. Rush, B. L. Shaw, & G. Emery, 1979) and Hamilton Rating Scale for
Depression
(M. Hamilton, 1960); recovery rates; and relapse rates were examined. Additionally, changes in relationship quality were evaluated. Results suggest that the COCT is as effective in improving depressive symptomatology as are the well-established, evidenced-based
CBT
and IPT approaches. The COCT did not demonstrate a significantly better outcome with regard to self-reported relationship satisfaction or dyadic coping; however, it did produce significant improvements in partners' expressed emotion, changes that were not seen in other treatment conditions.
...
PMID:Effects of coping-oriented couples therapy on depression: a randomized clinical trial. 1904 63
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