Prepared
Patient: Need help with Your Mental Health?
Newswise — Even after she
left her alcoholic, abusive husband behind,
Patrice, a nurse in Florida, couldn’t summon
the energy to keep her house straight,
couldn’t sleep.
Gaia, a children’s book
author in Oregon, found herself crying
uncontrollably and couldn’t focus. She felt
hopeless without knowing why.
Insomnia and oversleeping,
slowed speech, hopelessness, frequent crying
and lack of focus — all are symptoms of
depression. Overeating or lack of appetite;
suicidal thoughts; loss of interest or
pleasure in activities and relationships
that usually bring joy; anxiety and
difficulty feeling pleasure or sustaining
positive emotions can occur as well.
When to
Seek Help
So how can you distinguish
depression from sadness — and when does it
require professional help? “We all
experience ups and downs in life, but that
passes,” says John W. Williams, M.D., a
professor of medicine and psychiatry at Duke
University.
In contrast, he notes,
three important criteria define depression.
It must (1) last at least two weeks, (2)
include symptoms of feeling low or
pleasureless and (3) its symptoms must
interfere with the ability to work and live.
However, before you seek
help, “it doesn’t have to get to the point
of wondering. ‘Am I clinically depressed?’"
says Catherine Monk, an assistant professor
of clinical psychology in psychiatry at
Columbia University.
Some people fear being
stigmatized for seeking mental health care —
almost as if they have done something wrong
or are defective in some way that others
aren’t. But the brain, just like other parts
of our bodies, isn’t exempt from illness. In
fact, 16.6 percent of Americans will
experience at least one episode of major
depression.
Patrice, who suffered
depression following her divorce, resisted
seeking help. “In hindsight I realized that
my real strength showed through when I did
admit I needed to get help,” she says. "You
have to let your ego suffer the bruise.”
Therapist, General Practitioner or
Psychiatrist?
Figuring out where to find
help can be daunting. “A lot of it depends
on where you feel most comfortable,”
Williams says. “If you’ve got good
relationship with a primary care physician
that you have confidence in, that’s where I
would I start.”
Primary care physicians
(PCPs) can usually rule out physical causes
for the problem and prescribe medications
for treating depression — and may be able to
refer you to a good therapist. Some PCPs
even work with therapists and psychiatrists
to integrate treatment of mind and body — an
approach that improves results, if you can
find a group that uses it. Severe depression
often requires specialist care. So if
symptoms have lasted for years or you have
had previous episodes, starting with a
psychiatrist makes sense.
Talk
vs. Meds — Or Both?
Research shows that
medication and certain talk therapies are
about equally effective — and using both
together is better for some (but not all)
people. When depression is persistent or
recurrent, combining therapy and medication
may be preferable. Ethan Gorenstein, an
associate clinical professor of behavioral
medicine at Columbia University, notes that
about 60 percent of people will recover with
either option, compared with 80 percent
using the combination.
Given that, Gorenstein
says that what matters is your own
preference: Start with the approach you
prefer. “And if a fair trial of either one
alone doesn’t yield sufficient improvement,
you should consider adding the other.”
Finding
the Right Care
If you opt for
psychotherapy, the two types most supported
by research are cognitive behavioral therapy
(CBT) and interpersonal therapy. CBT works
to change misleading thoughts and
perceptions that can drive depression. For
example, depressed people often think that
if anything goes wrong, it means that
everything will collapse. CBT helps them
focus instead what’s actually happening.
CBT is more widely
available than interpersonal therapy, which
focuses on a person’s relationships. It can
sometimes be hard to find therapists who use
either of these techniques in the way that
the studies found effective.
“There are two clear
indicators that someone is practicing CBT,”
Gorenstein says. “The first is that they are
focused on the present and finding thinking
and behavioral strategies for coping. What
they won’t be concerned with is identifying
the cause. If someone is focusing on what
led you to be this way as opposed to how you
can change, that’s an indication that you
are not getting CBT.” Second, CBT doesn’t
spotlight your relationship with the
therapist, Gorenstein notes.
Beyond technique, numerous
studies have found that what matters most to
recovery is whether the patient feels
connected to the therapist.
“The research is pretty
strong that about five times as much
therapeutic value comes from the quality of
the relationship than from any
evidence-based practice,” says Eric Goplerud,
a professor of health policy at George
Washington University. “It’s important to
look for evidence-based practices, but if
you don’t feel like this is a person you can
work with, you ought not go there.”
Feeling
Good Again
“You aren’t aiming for
being less miserable. It’s about being
comfortable about being able to experience
the good and the bad of life,” Goplerud
says.
As for Patrice and Gaia,
both sought and received effective
treatment. Patrice responded to a radio
commercial seeking subjects for a clinical
trial of antidepressants. She took
antidepressants for about six months.
“Now I have joy,” she
says. “It’s not forced, it’s not faked. I’m
in a fantastic mood every day, I’m off meds.
I’m so grateful I that I took that step and
I would do it again in a heartbeat, but I
don’t think I would wait as long and get to
depth I was in before.”
Gaia, too, stopped the
medication after a few years of using both
therapy and an antidepressant. “I can still
dip down,” she says, “But I can get out of
it myself a lot quicker and I don’t just
stay there.” “Don’t be ashamed to get help
or feel bad,” she says, “Own it and do it.”
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