Changing thoughts ‘can help cure severe depression’
May 13th, 2010 - 4:40 pm ICT by ANIWashington, May 13 (ANI): A study has revealed that moderate to severely depressed clients showed greater improvement in cognitive therapy when therapists emphasized changing how they thought rather than how they behaved.
The results suggest use of cognitive techniques to break out of negative thought patterns and to see events in their lives more realistically.
An attempt to change behaviour, such as getting the patient to get out of the house, and tracking how they spent their time was not very helpful.
“There has been a lot of attention recently on behavioural approaches to treating severe depression, and that may lead some people to suspect that cognitive techniques are not important for more severely depressed patients,” said Daniel Strunk, co-author of the study and assistant professor of psychology at Ohio State University.
“But our results suggest that it was the cognitive strategies that actually helped patients improve the most during the first critical weeks of cognitive-behavioural therapy.”
The study involved 60 patients who were diagnosed with major depression and who were being treated at two university clinics.
All the patients were being treated by one of six cognitive therapists and agreed to have their therapy sessions videotaped for study.
The tapes showed that that depression scores improved significantly when their therapists focused on cognitive techniques, but didn’t change when their therapists focused on behavioural techniques.
Patients improved more when they collaborated with their therapists about a plan for treatment and followed that plan.
“We’re trying to understand if cognitive therapy leads people to a profound change in their basic self view, or if it teaches them a set of skills that they have to continually practice over time,” Strunk said.
Their results appear online in the journal Behaviour Research and Therapy and will appear in a later print edition. (ANI)
- Take cognitive therapy to come out of severe depression - May 13, 2010
- Music therapy benefits stroke patients - Jul 06, 2010
- How to fight loneliness - Sep 12, 2010
- Cataract surgery improves mood, sleep in Alzheimer's - Oct 26, 2011
- Anti-depressants use found to have long-term benefits - Apr 08, 2011
- Complete recovery now possible for patients with 'untreatable' mental illness - Nov 19, 2009
- Information technology could help prevent, treat depression - Dec 04, 2010
- Magnetic pulses could overcome depression, schizophrenia - Feb 08, 2012
- Mindfulness-based therapy 'prevents depression relapse' - Dec 07, 2010
- Tai chi 'cuts depression in elderly people' - Mar 17, 2011
- Post-stroke depression increases dependency - Mar 16, 2011
- Switching medications, regular therapy could help teens with severe depression - May 18, 2010
- Does psychotherapy induce changes in the brain? - Feb 15, 2011
- Is sex addiction really a disease or just a convenient excuse? - Feb 25, 2011
- Elderly people with clinical depression more prone to knee arthritis - Mar 17, 2011
Tags: behaviour research and therapy, behavioural approaches, behavioural techniques, co author, cognitive behavioural therapy, cognitive strategies, cognitive techniques, cognitive therapists, cognitive therapy, depressed clients, depressed patients, major depression, ohio state university, profound change, self view, severe depression, strunk, therapy sessions, thought patterns, university clinics