Objective: To investigate how residual symptoms from an index episode of major depressive disorder may be associated with recurrence, the authors conducted a trial involving four maintenance treatment approaches and examined 1) whether the level and variability of residual symptoms differed among the maintenance treatment conditions and 2) whether greater symptom variability is associated with a higher likelihood of recurrence and more rapid recurrence.
Method: Patients enrolled in a maintenance treatment study (N=114) were randomly assigned to one of four maintenance treatment conditions: imipramine plus interpersonal psychotherapy, imipramine alone, interpersonal psychotherapy alone, or no active treatment. Residual symptoms were characterized both as continuous variables (mean values and coefficients of variation for Hamilton Depression Rating Scale and Global Assessment Scale [GAS] scores) and as a categorical variable, the percentage of maintenance evaluations with a Hamilton depression scale score > or =8 (e.
Although multiple factors may influence the sexual function of depressed women over the course of treatment, the independent contributions of these factors are poorly understood. The current study examined the effects of depression, SSRI treatment, and sexual partner availability on women's sexual function. The sexual function of 68 recurrently depressed women was assessed at 3-month intervals over a 1-year course of treatment with interpersonal psychotherapy with or without adjunctive SSRI treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Women with depression whose diagnosis is made in community mental health clinics attend relatively few treatment sessions. A pilot project was undertaken to test the feasibility of providing psychotherapy for depressed women in a supermarket, a novel setting that may minimize barriers to care such as stigma associated with visiting a mental health clinic.
Methods: Twelve women who met DSM-IV criteria for a depressive disorder were recruited from a rural mental health clinic and offered 16 weekly sessions of supportive psychotherapy with cognitive-behavioral elements in an administrative conference room of a local supermarket.
Little research has examined the association of tobacco dependence with nicotine tolerance or reinforcement in a clinical sample. Smokers preparing to quit smoking participated in laboratory sessions to assess nicotine tolerance on subjective, cardiovascular, and performance measures and to assess nicotine reinforcement using a choice procedure. Participants were then provided with individual counseling (but no medication), made a quit attempt, and were followed for 1 year to determine clinical outcome, as determined by postquit withdrawal and days to relapse.
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