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Little
evidence that Psychotherapy helps Elderly
with Depression
By Becky Ham, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
The jury is still out on whether
psychotherapy can help older people with
depression, according to a new review of
recent research.
Among the small number of patients studied,
there were some signs that a treatment
called cognitive behavioral therapy could
help older patients manage their depression,
at least compared to those waiting to start
therapy.
Overall, however, “the findings do not
provide strong support for psychotherapeutic
treatments in the management of depression
in older people,” said lead review author
Kenneth Wilson, of the University of
Liverpool, in England.
The review of studies appears in the latest
issue of The Cochrane Library, a publication
of The Cochrane Collaboration, an
international organization that evaluates
medical research. Systematic reviews like
this one draw evidence-based conclusions
about medical practice after considering
both the content and quality of existing
medical trials on a topic.
Depression is a common – but often
undiagnosed – problem among older people. “A
significant proportion of older people with
the condition will describe themselves as
experiencing a loss of enjoyment and a
feeling of ill health rather than sadness or
a feeling of depression,” Wilson said.
Wilson and colleagues reviewed nine studies
focused on the use of psychotherapy for mild
depression in some 700 older patients. Most
of the studies involved cognitive behavioral
therapy, which encourages patients to
replace daily “unhealthy thoughts” with a
more positive and realistic viewpoint. A few
of the studies used psychodynamic therapy,
which attempts to reveal unconscious
thoughts and feelings that might be
contributing to depression.
In five studies, patients who received
cognitive behavioral therapy had
significantly fewer symptoms of depression
than those waiting to enter a therapy
program.
However, most of the studies were small,
with relatively few men and many patients
who dropped out before the end of their
treatment. The patients ranged from mildly
to severely depressed, and the treatments
themselves were not standard between
studies.
Despite stronger evidence of psychotherapy
helping younger people, “all of these
complications make it hard to say whether
psychotherapy could be beneficial among
older people,” Wilson said.
Also at issue is the question of whether
psychotherapies should be the subject of
stricter regulation, according to Michael
Sharpe, a professor of psychological
medicine at the University of Edinburgh, in
Scotland. He said that many see
psychotherapies as less harmful than drug
therapy.
“We need a much more sophisticated view than
‘psychotherapy good; drug treatment bad’ if
we are to effectively and safely improve the
mental health of the population,” Sharpe
said.
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