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Ways to Overcome Depression
Conquering Depression, Enjoying Life
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Good Mood: The New
Psychology
of Overcoming Depression
Appendix D
Tests of the Efficacy
of Therapy
cont.
appendd 8-150 January 20, 1993
Unlike traditional psychoanalysis1, cognitive
therapy has been subjected to controlled tests. Tests that compare drugs with
psychotherapy, as well as tests of various forms of psychotherapy, must
overcome a particularly difficult set of obstacles, such as allowing for the
quality and style of the particular psychotherapist.2 But the body of work has
been sufficiently competent that we are safely able to conclude that cognitive
therapy works well @@@ - at least as well as drugs, on average, better than
drugs for some kinds of people, and as an adjunct that may improve the
performance of drugs when they are used.
INSERT 283 A
@@@ Miller, Norman, and Keitner (1989)
summarize as follows:
A number of psychotherapies that can be
described as cognitive-behavioral have been found to be effective treatments
for depressed outpatients, producing at least as much improvement as was
produced by pharmacotherapy. Combining cognitive-behavioral treatment with
pharmacotherapy has been found to result in higher response rates in some
studies but equivalent rates in others (p. 1274).
And in their own long-run follow-up study they
found that "significantly higher proportions of the patients who received
additional [to the standard treatment including drugs] cognitive- behavioral
treatment (cognitive therapy or social skills) had responded by the end of the
formal treatment period and did not relapse for the remainder of the 1-year
follow-up period" (p. 1274).@@@
END INSERT 283A
The first study seems to have been that of
Ellis in 1957, which showed that his variety of cognitive therapy -- Rational-
Emotive Therapy -- is indeed effective. Since then there have been a wide
variety of studies from many different angles. Beck (1976, Chapter 12)
summarized the studies of his own variety of cognitive therapy until that time;
they are further reviewed in Beck et. al. (1979, Chapter 18). The studies show
that for un-hospitalized depressed persons -- both volunteers and clinic
patients -- of several sorts, the groups that received cognitive therapy did
better than did groups that received no therapy or only support. For
hospitalized patients, cognitive therapy generally did as well or better than
anti-depressant drugs, and the addition of drugs to cognitive therapy did not
improve results, though Beck et. al. suggest that in some cases adding drugs to
cognitive therapy probably is warranted. A long-term follow-up study by Miller,
Norman, and Keitner (1989) showed that patients treated with
cognitive-behavioral therapy in addition to drugs have fewer recurring episodes
than do patients treated with drugs alone.
Inter-personal Therapy is another form of
cognitive treatment that has been evaluated in controlled tests, and has been
shown to be effective. Klerman et. al. (1984, pp. 18, 19; see also Klerman,
1988) @@@and Karasu (1990a; 199b)@@@ summarize the studies of their
method.
A large scale and well-controlled double-blind
(for drugs) test was done by the National Institute of Mental Health at three
separate university sites, beginning in 1980, comparing Beck's Cognitive
Therapy, Interpersonal Therapy, imiprimine (a tricyclic anti-depressant drug),
and a placebo-plus-support-group. As of 1986, slightly more than half of the
drug and psychotherapy groups had "returned to normal" after 16
weeks, whereas only 29% of the placebo-support subjects had done so.3 At the
conclusion of treatment, the active psychotherapies were as successful as the
drug imipramine in reducing the symptoms of depression and improving the
patient's ability to function. Drug treatment produced improvement more
rapidly, but the active psychotherapies caught up later. Both more-severely and
less-severely depressed patients benefited from the active psychotherapies
(Elkin et. al., 1986, abstract).
In addition to the outcome studies of cognitive
therapy, there have been studies of the mechanism of depression that
support the underlying theory. For example, Seligman et. al. (1988) found that
what has come to be called "explanatory style" -- the reasons people
give for bad events that occur, and the extent to which they blame either
themselves or outside forces -- changes during cognitive therapy for depression
in a fashion which confirms the theory; improvement in mood is accompanied by
reduction of self-blame.
Testing Self-Comparisons Analysis
It should be reasonably easy and inexpensive to
determine the extent to which the thought processes of depressives are indeed
framed as negative self-comparisons. There exist numerous protocols of
depressed patients as well as questionnaire studies of samples of depressed and
non-depressed persons that have been used for research on cognitive therapy (e.
g. the studies reviewed in Peterson and Seligman, 1984, and in Beck, 1976, pp.
124-128; see also Peterson, Bettes, and Seligman, 1985. The content of these
protocols and questionnaires could be re-analyzed for the purposes at hand
using standard techniques of content analysis. And questionnaire studies
gathering new data with instruments adapted from the existing survey
instruments should be able to take advantage of the pre-existing body of
research.
INSERT 295 B
Testing Computer-Assisted Therapy
Along with this book is offered the computer
program Overcoming Depression developed by Kenneth Colby - the
"father" of computer-delivered therapy - based on the
Self-Comparisons Therapy described in the book, and presented in
natural-language English rather than computerese; this is the first natural-
language computer program to do cognitive therapy. The findings of a study by
Selmi et. al. (1990) of cognitive therapy administered by computer are most
relevant here. The patients suffering from mild to moderate depression who were
treated with the computer program did as well as the patients who received
similar cognitive therapy in person, and significantly better than control
subjects. @@@
END INSERT 285 B
1See Colby and Stoller (1988) for discussion of
the untested and perhaps untestable status of psychoanalysis.
2See Elkin et. al., 1988a and 1988b for a
cogent discussion of these research problems.
3Holden, 1986, 723-727
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