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As the use of
antidepressant drugs rises, and the debate over their
safety and
effectiveness for children heats up, psychologists and therapists
who treat youngsters are beginning to embrace an innovative form of
therapy.
"Cognitive behavioral therapy," once used mainly in adults to treat
anxiety
disorders, increasingly is being used to treat
depression in
kids. Several studies have shown that this short-term, systematic
program can be as effective as other forms of therapy, as well as drugs. The
technique requires a therapist with specialized training, and understanding
the approach can help parents give their teens guidance.
About 10 million children and teenagers suffer from some form of
psychiatric illness, according to a recent surgeon-general report. There has
been significant growth since 1990 in both the number of youngsters
diagnosed with depression and in the use of antidepressants to treat them,
according to research presented at the American Psychological Association's
meeting this month.
Some psychiatrists credit the drugs for the sharp decline in the suicide
rate among young people since 1994. Suicide still is the third-leading cause
of teenage death after accidents and homicides, however. Parents and
mental-health experts have grown increasingly concerned about anecdotal
evidence that the drugs can lead to suicidal tendencies in teens. In the
search for alternative treatments, cognitive behavioral therapy is emerging
as a viable choice.
CBT rests on an increasingly popular notion among child psychologists
that teens can be taught, much like with math and reading skills, to
recognize and react to stresses in a positive, appropriate manner. The aim
is to teach adolescents in a four- to nine-month course of weekly discussion
sessions how to alter their tendency to respond negatively to difficult
experiences.
Proponents contend that certain emotionally vulnerable children develop a
habit of viewing life through a dark filter. For reasons not clear -- in
some cases due to genetics, trauma or a combination of the two -- these kids
enter their teen years seeing themselves as helpless and inferior, and the
world around them and their future as bleak, says Anne Marie Albano, a CBT
researcher who recently moved to Columbia University from New York
University's Child Study Center.
Unlike some forms of therapy, CBT isn't concerned with why this attitude
has taken hold. More simply, the goal is to help the child accept that their
situation is under their control.
The first step, Dr. Albano says, is to help teens understand that their
mood comes from viewing the world as a "glass half-empty." For instance, a
depressed or anxious teen may have a habit of automatically concluding the
worst outcome of a situation is the one most likely to occur. Or, a teen may
routinely discount his or her successes while focusing on mistakes. These
responses, the child is told, can be altered with practice.
The teen then is asked to monitor mood changes each day so the earliest
signs of anxiety can be identified. This helps the therapist and child zero
in on specific problems at school or with friends that trigger negative
feelings. The therapy may uncover, for instance, that a child gets
especially anxious the night before a test and may have trouble falling
asleep or going to school the next day.
Together, the teen and the therapist come up with different ideas for
solving the problems. One approach might involve helping the child get a
realistic idea of the worst-case consequences of not doing well. The child
is asked to test out new ways of thinking or acting about the things that
generate anxiety. The last weeks of therapy are spent fine-tuning new
problem-solving strategies.
As with traditional psychotherapy, "some of the benefit comes simply by
giving the feelings words, and by identifying what triggers them," Dr.
Albano says.
CBT's effectiveness is increasingly bolstered by clinical data. In
several studies in the 1990s, "CBT provided more rapid relief and proved
more credible to parents" than other forms of psychotherapy, according to
John March, a Duke University researcher. This fall, Dr. March and
researchers elsewhere are expected to release the results of a
government-funded six-year trial comparing the use of CBT alone, CBT with
antidepressant drugs, and the use of drugs alone.
The technique also is gaining favor in graduate-training programs, says
Laura Mufson, a research psychologist at Columbia University, as more
psychology and social-work students are pursuing it as a field of study.
Even so, CBT's advocates say the short-term technique isn't a cure-all,
noting that the studies show 40% of children treated failed to respond. That
is about the same failure rate for drugs or other forms of psychotherapy.
Specialists argue that it takes an experienced therapist to determine if it
is an appropriate approach.
Some critics say it is best for alleviating sources of apprehension, such
as social phobias or test-taking and other performance anxieties, but that
it isn't as effective once a deep depression has set in.
"The truth is we don't really know what works best for depression in
adolescents," says Rachel Klein, also a researcher at NYU. She points out
that only since the early 1980s have professionals begun to accept that
teenagers can suffer the same wide spectrum of emotional illnesses as
adults, and that severe moodiness in teens isn't simply something kids will
outgrow.
Source: Wall Street Journal
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