Objective: Previous studies have established a connection between therapy and healthcare cost: an increase in cost prior to therapy and a maintained decrease post therapy. There is, however, a lack of studies examining the combined effects of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy on healthcare cost.
Method: Healthcare cost was examined quarterly in 1,213 patients (28,776 observations) in a naturalistic longitudinal design.
Our objective was to examine the effectiveness and efficiency of psychodynamic psychotherapy on the reduction in health care utilization and cost while controlling for age, gender, and year. Health care utilization and cost were examined yearly in 1,675 patients from 2 years before outpatient psychotherapy (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIsr J Psychiatry Relat Sci
April 2017
The association between severity of psychiatric disorder and dental disease has not been adequately studied. The aim of the present study was to examine the level of dental caries morbidity and the association with Severe Mental Illness (SMI) and mild/moderate psychiatric disorders. The population sample included patients aged 30 to 50, treated at the Hadassah psychiatric outpatient clinic, after giving written informed consent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Physical exercise has been shown to reduce depressive symptoms when used in combination with antidepressant medication. We report a randomized controlled trial of aerobic exercise compared to stretching as an augmentation strategy for hospitalized patients with major depression.
Methods: Male or female patients, 18-80 years, diagnosed with a Major Depressive Episode, were randomly assigned to three weeks of augmentation therapy with aerobic (n=6) or stretching exercise (n=6).