ORCID Profile
0000-0002-5877-6616
Current Organisation
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois
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Publisher: CAIRN
Date: 06-12-2019
Abstract: The collaboration between general practitioners (GPs) and psychiatrists in the management of chronic depression is considered as necessary but found suboptimal in the literature. The present qualitative study aims to better understand the factors influencing the decision to refer a patient with chronic depression to a psychiatrist. In order to do so, we conducted three focus groups with GPs in the French speaking part of Switzerland. The focus groups were recorded and transcribed, then coded by three members of the pluridisciplinary research team, using the software MaxQDA.We show that GPs carry out an implicit classification process of the patients, parting those who are good cases for the psychiatrist from those who express their suffering only by the body. The latter will only be treated at the GP s practice. We argue that such a classification may therefore produce unequal access to psychotherapy.We identify several reasons for GPs to refer patients with chronic depression. These reasons rarely relate to the acknowledgement of a specific expertise of the psychiatrist in the management of chronic depression. It also appears that GPs perceive themselves as specialists of the relationship , which they consider central to the management of chronic depression. In addition, some GPs have negative representations of psychiatrists. These factors suggest the existence of issues around professional boundaries, which can work against collaboration.In conclusion, a clarification of the specificities of the GPs and the psychiatrists through training and interprofessional meetings would help reduce the negative representations of GPs about psychiatrists and promote collaboration, thus facilitating the referral of patients with chronic depression to the psychiatrist.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 13-09-2017
DOI: 10.1111/PAPT.12152
Abstract: The concept of biased thinking - or cognitive biases - is relevant to psychotherapy research and clinical conceptualization, beyond cognitive theories. The present naturalistic study aimed to examine the changes in biased thinking over the course of a short-term dynamic psychotherapy (STDP) and to discover potential links between these changes and symptomatic improvement. This study focuses on 32 self-referred patients consulting for Adjustment Disorder according to DSM-IV-TR. The therapists were experienced psychodynamically oriented psychiatrists and psychotherapists. Coding of cognitive biases (using the Cognitive Errors Rating Scale CERS) was made by external raters based on transcripts of interviews of psychotherapy the reliability of these ratings on a randomly chosen 24% of all sessions was established. Based on the Symptom Check List SCL-90-R given before and after, the Reliable Change Index (RCI) was used. The assessment of cognitive errors was done at three time points: early (session 4-7), mid-treatment (session 12-17), and close to the end (after session 20) of the treatment. The results showed that the total frequency of cognitive biases was stable over time (p = .20), which was true both for positive and for negative cognitive biases. In exploring the three main subscales of the CERS, we found a decrease in selective abstraction (p = .02) and an increase in personalization (p = .05). A significant link between RCI scores (outcome) and frequency of positive cognitive biases was found, suggesting that biases towards the positive might have a protective function in psychotherapy. Therapists may be attentive to changes in biased thinking across short-term dynamic psychotherapy for adjustment disorder. Therapists may foster the emergence of positive cognitive biases at mid-treatment for adjustment disorder.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 2007
DOI: 10.1002/CPP.521
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 30-10-2012
Abstract: A few recent studies have found indications of the effectiveness of inpatient psychotherapy for depression, usually of an extended duration. However, there is a lack of controlled studies in this area and to date no study of adequate quality on brief psychodynamic psychotherapy for depression during short inpatient stay exists. The present article describes the protocol of a study that will examine the relative efficacy, the cost-effectiveness and the cost-utility of adding an Inpatient Brief Psychodynamic Psychotherapy to pharmacotherapy and treatment-as-usual for inpatients with unipolar depression. The study is a one-month randomized controlled trial with a two parallel group design and a 12-month naturalistic follow-up. A s le of 130 consecutive adult inpatients with unipolar depression and Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale score over 18 will be recruited. The study is carried out in the university hospital section for mood disorders in Lausanne, Switzerland. Patients are assessed upon admission, and at 1-, 3- and 12- month follow-ups. Inpatient therapy is a manualized brief intervention, combining the virtues of inpatient setting and of time-limited dynamic therapies (focal orientation, fixed duration, resource-oriented interventions). Treatment-as-usual represents the best level of practice for a minimal treatment condition usually proposed to inpatients. Final analyses will follow an intention–to-treat strategy. Depressive symptomatology is the primary outcome and secondary outcome includes measures of psychiatric symptomatology, psychosocial role functioning, and psychodynamic-emotional functioning. The mediating role of the therapeutic alliance is also examined. Allocation to treatment groups uses a stratified block randomization method with permuted block. To guarantee allocation concealment, randomization is done by an independent researcher. Despite the large number of studies on treatment of depression, there is a clear lack of controlled research in inpatient psychotherapy during the acute phase of a major depressive episode. Research on brief therapy is important to take into account current short lengths of stay in psychiatry. The current study has the potential to scientifically inform appropriate inpatient treatment. This study is the first to address the issue of the economic evaluation of inpatient psychotherapy. Australian New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry (ACTRN12612000909820)
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Date: 03-04-2021
Publisher: Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Date: 05-2014
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 23-03-2023
DOI: 10.1007/S00127-023-02462-8
Abstract: Previous population-based studies have partially provided inconsistent results regarding the co-variates of chronic depression, which were likely to be attributable to methodological limitations. The present paper that compared people with chronic major depressive disorder (MDD), non-chronic MDD and no mood disorder in the community focused on specific atypical and melancholic depression symptoms and subtypes of MDD, family history (FH) of mood disorders, measured physical cardio-vascular risk factors (CVRF), personality traits, coping style and adverse life-events. Data stemmed from a population-based cohort including 3618 participants (female 53%, n=1918 mean age 50.9 years, s.d. 8.8 years). Among them 563 had a lifetime history of chronic MDD, 1060 of non-chronic MDD and 1995 of no mood disorder. Diagnostic and FH information were elicited through semi-structured interviews, CVRF were assessed through physical investigations. The major findings were that chronic MDD was associated with increase in appetite/weight and suicidal ideation/attempts during the most severe episode, higher exposure to life-events in adulthood, higher levels of neuroticism, lower levels of extraversion and lower levels of informal help-seeking behavior but less frequent FH of MDD compared to non-chronic MDD. Chronic MDD is associated with a series of potential modifiable risk factors which are accessible via psychotherapeutic approaches that may improve the course of chronic MDD.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 02-2017
DOI: 10.1016/J.JAD.2016.11.013
Abstract: For severe and chronic depression, inpatient treatment may be necessary. Current guidelines recommend combined psychological and pharmacological treatments for moderate to severe depression. Results for positive effects of combined treatment for depressed inpatients are still ambiguous. This randomised controlled trial examined the efficacy of adding an intensive and brief psychodynamic psychotherapy (IBPP) to treatment-as-usual (TAU) for inpatients with DSM-IV major depressive episode. The primary outcomes were reduction in depression severity, and response and remission rates at post-treatment, 3-month and 12-month follow-up points. A linear mixed model analysis (N=149) showed a higher reduction in the observer-rated severity of depressive symptoms at each follow-up point for the IBPP condition compared with the TAU condition (post-treatment ES=0.39, 95%CI 0.06-0.71 3-month ES=0.46, 95%CI 0.14-0.78 12-month ES=0.32, 95%CI 0.01-0.64). Response rate was superior in the IBPP group compared with the TAU group at all follow-up points (post-treatment OR =2.69, 95%CI 1.18-6.11 3-month OR=3.47, 95%CI 1.47-8.25 12-month OR=2.26, 95%CI 1.02-4.97). IBPP patients were more likely to be remitted 3 months (OR=2.82, 95%CI 1.12-7.10) and 12 months (OR=2.93, 95%CI 1.12-7.68) after discharge than TAU patients. Heterogeneous s le with different subtypes of depression and comorbidity. IBPP decreased observer-rated depression severity up to 12 months after the end of treatment. IBPP demonstrated immediate and distant treatment responses as well as substantial remissions at follow-up. IBPP appears to be a valuable adjunct in the treatment of depressed inpatients.
Publisher: Routledge
Date: 12-10-2023
Start Date: 2011
End Date: 2014
Funder: Swiss National Science Foundation
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