Dialectical behavior therapy for depressed older adults: a randomized pilot study
Dialectical behavior therapy for depressed older adults: a randomized pilot study
Objective: Although there is evidence for the efficacy of antidepressants and for some individual and group psychotherapy interventions for depressed older adults, a significant number of these do not respond to treatment. Authors assessed the benefits of augmenting medication with group psychotherapy.
Methods: They randomly assigned 34 (largely chronically) depressed individuals age 60 and older to receive 28 weeks of antidepressant medication plus clinical management, either alone (MED) or with the addition of dialectical behavior therapy skills-training and scheduled telephone coaching sessions (MED+DBT).
Results: Only MED+DBT showed significant decreases on mean self-rated depression scores, and both treatment groups demonstrated significant and roughly equivalent decreases on interviewer-rated depression scores. However, on interviewer-rated depression, 71% of MED+DBT patients were in remission at post-treatment, in contrast to 47% of MED patients. At a 6-month follow-up, 75% of MED+DBT patients were in remission, compared with only 31% of MED patients, a significant difference. Only patients receiving MED+DBT showed significant improvements from pre- to post-treatment on dependency and adaptive coping that are proposed to create vulnerability to depression.
Conclusion: Results from this pilot study suggest that DBT skills training and telephone coaching may offer promise to effectively augment the effects of antidepressant medication in depressed older adults.
33-45
Lynch, Thomas R.
29e90123-0aef-46c8-b320-1617fb48bb20
Morse, Jennifer Q.
db308961-52f1-48e2-af29-64ae9dc6e519
Medelson, Tamar M.A.
cb099cff-3377-4e52-ad9d-20ff4c37c432
Robins, Clive J.
5fcd3fd0-adbf-4859-a7c1-c01138ec0101
January 2003
Lynch, Thomas R.
29e90123-0aef-46c8-b320-1617fb48bb20
Morse, Jennifer Q.
db308961-52f1-48e2-af29-64ae9dc6e519
Medelson, Tamar M.A.
cb099cff-3377-4e52-ad9d-20ff4c37c432
Robins, Clive J.
5fcd3fd0-adbf-4859-a7c1-c01138ec0101
Lynch, Thomas R., Morse, Jennifer Q., Medelson, Tamar M.A. and Robins, Clive J.
(2003)
Dialectical behavior therapy for depressed older adults: a randomized pilot study.
American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 11 (1), .
(PMID:12527538)
Abstract
Objective: Although there is evidence for the efficacy of antidepressants and for some individual and group psychotherapy interventions for depressed older adults, a significant number of these do not respond to treatment. Authors assessed the benefits of augmenting medication with group psychotherapy.
Methods: They randomly assigned 34 (largely chronically) depressed individuals age 60 and older to receive 28 weeks of antidepressant medication plus clinical management, either alone (MED) or with the addition of dialectical behavior therapy skills-training and scheduled telephone coaching sessions (MED+DBT).
Results: Only MED+DBT showed significant decreases on mean self-rated depression scores, and both treatment groups demonstrated significant and roughly equivalent decreases on interviewer-rated depression scores. However, on interviewer-rated depression, 71% of MED+DBT patients were in remission at post-treatment, in contrast to 47% of MED patients. At a 6-month follow-up, 75% of MED+DBT patients were in remission, compared with only 31% of MED patients, a significant difference. Only patients receiving MED+DBT showed significant improvements from pre- to post-treatment on dependency and adaptive coping that are proposed to create vulnerability to depression.
Conclusion: Results from this pilot study suggest that DBT skills training and telephone coaching may offer promise to effectively augment the effects of antidepressant medication in depressed older adults.
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Published date: January 2003
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Local EPrints ID: 194347
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/194347
PURE UUID: 9458ca3e-de98-470e-93bf-5649e52c1f93
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Date deposited: 27 Jul 2011 10:43
Last modified: 27 Apr 2022 01:52
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Contributors
Author:
Jennifer Q. Morse
Author:
Tamar M.A. Medelson
Author:
Clive J. Robins
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