More threads by David Baxter PhD

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Instant messaging can help depression
BMJ Group, The Guardian
Friday 21 August 2009

That pop-up message window may be an irritant to many of us, but new research shows it can be used as an aid to getting over depression.

Researchers have found that online talking treatment using instant messaging can help people recover from depression. Accessing treatment online could make psychological therapies more widely available, and help people who find it challenging to visit a therapist.

What do we know already?
Talking treatments have been shown to help people with depression, but a shortage of therapists and long waiting times mean that it's not always easy to get treatment. According to the Mental Health Foundation, it's common for British patients to wait more than a year to get talking treatment, and 78 percent of GPs have prescribed antidepressant drugs through lack of an alternative. In America, drugs for depression are the most commonly prescribed of all medications.

Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) is one of the most common psychological approaches to treating depression. It helps you examine how you see yourself and other people, and how your behaviour affects your feelings. It tends to focus on the here and now, looking at practical coping strategies, although it can also involve some discussion of the past.

Even when therapists are available, there can be problems with access to CBT. Some people referred to therapy never manage to attend a single session, and, worryingly, it's often the most severely ill who don't manage to access care. Finding the time and motivation to attend therapy can be difficult for someone with severe depression.

Researchers have explored several ways of using technology to bypass the barriers to treatment and reduce drop-out rates. There are self-help books and computer programmes based on CBT, and therapy has been offered over the phone or by email. Now, a new study has looked at whether CBT can work if it's offered entirely through instant messaging, using a password-protected computer system.

What does the new study say?
The study looked at 297 people, most of whom suffered from anxiety as well as depression. Half had up to 10 sessions of therapy, each lasting about an hour, where they used instant messaging to chat one-to-one with a trained therapist. The other half got the usual care from a GP.

During the study, about 4 in 10 people who had online therapy improved to the point where they were no longer depressed. Only 2 in 10 people recovered with the usual care from a GP. The benefits of therapy lasted at least eight months.

The researchers didn't compare online therapy with traditional therapy, but judging by other studies, both seem to offer similar benefits. The researchers think that for some people it might be easier to write about their problems than talk about them. Another advantage of online therapy is that the computer can save messages, so people can re-read the discussion with their therapist if they need to.

People seemed to get more benefit from chatting online with a therapist if they were more severely depressed to start with.

How reliable are the findings?
People carried on with other treatments for depression during the study, and people having online therapy were slightly more likely to be taking antidepressant drugs. However, the difference was small and is unlikely to have affected the results.

Where does the study come from?
The study included patients from Bristol, London, and Warwickshire. It was published in The Lancet, a medical journal owned by a company called Elsevier.

The study was paid for by the BUPA Foundation, an independent charity that receives funding from BUPA.

What does this mean for me?
Instant messaging therapy offers several advantages. There's no travel time, and if there are no therapists in your area, you can easily chat to someone from further afield. Online therapy could also help people with mobility problems, and remove language barriers by offering access to therapists who speak foreign languages.

Treatment would still depend on the availability of trained therapists, since the care offered still involved full, one-to-one sessions, even though the communication took place online.

An NHS programme aims to train 3,600 new therapists by 2011, although mental health charities are still campaigning for better access to talking therapies.

What should I do now?
If you want to try a talking treatment for depression, ask your doctor about availability in your area. There have been trials of online therapy programmes in the UK, but the service isn't widely available. You could ask your doctor about books, computer programmes, or web sites that are based on CBT principles.

From: Kessler D, Lewis G, Kaur S, et al. Therapist-delivered internet psychotherapy for depression in primary care: a randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2009; 374: 628-634.
 

David Baxter PhD

Late Founder
Web-Based Psychotherapy Can Work

Web-Based Psychotherapy Can Work
By Amanda Gardner, HealthDay
Aug. 20, 2009

Online psychotherapy with patient and therapist texting each other in real-time can be effective, potentially giving thousands or even millions of patients new access to much-needed treatment, researchers say.

The new study adds to a growing body of research and practice involving technology-based treatments for depression and other mental health issues. In this case, the specific type of therapy used was cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT).

"There is a role for this, it's exciting," said one expert, Dr. Kathryn J. Kotrla, chairwoman and associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral science at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine. "CBT is tremendously underutilized."

This and other computer-based treatment could benefit people in rural or remote areas who need psychotherapy, including traumatized veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.

Cognitive therapy "is proven [effective] for trauma-related issues," said Kotrla, who is also associate dean of the Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine, Round Rock campus. And providing it online means that "it's discreet, it's time-related. It avoids the issue of stigma," she said.

The new findings, by a team at the University of Bristol in the United Kingdom, are published Aug. 22 in a special Global Mental Health edition of the journal The Lancet.

According to an accompanying commentary article, prescription rates for antidepressant medications have soared over the past two decades, alongside a decline in the number of people receiving in-person psychotherapy.

Meanwhile, the commentary states, a good proportion of people for whom therapy is recommended never show up and half of those who do show up don't last through to the fourth appointment.

So, "people are looking at different ways of delivering psychotherapy other than the traditional go-to-the-therapist's-office-and-meet-for-50-minutes," said Dr. Gregory E. Simon, co-author of the commentary and a psychiatrist and researcher with Group Health Cooperative in Seattle. "On the far extreme are completely computerized or completely automated programs that don't have to have a human being involved. On the other end, people may communicate with a therapist through a Web site or telephone but there's a real live therapist there they're communicating with."

For this study, nearly 300 British patients with depression were randomly assigned to receive online CBT or were put on an eight-month waiting list for online CBT while they received usual care from their general practitioner.

The online therapy, which consisted of 10 weekly 55-minute sessions, essentially involved instant messages back and forth. About two-thirds of participants "showed up" for five or more sessions.

After four months of follow-up, 38 percent of patients in the CBT group recovered from depression compared with 24 percent in the control group, the study found.

At eight months, recovery rates were 42 percent in the intervention group and 26 percent in the control group, the researchers found. That's an improvement on recovery rates seen in conventional therapy.

The authors hypothesized that the heightened success rate might be due to the fact that people are writing rather than speaking their feelings and thoughts. "This approach could enhance metacognitive awareness, a term applied to changing the patient's relationship with negative thoughts and feelings, rather than changing their belief in the content of the negative thoughts," they wrote in the report.

Virtual therapy sessions with a real person do not save much in costs (except for gas) and there may be a trade-off in terms of quality of communication. But the real benefits come in access and convenience, experts said.

"When you make the therapy much more convenient, people will be more likely to stick with it," Simon said. "I don't think anyone would argue that you don't lose something. Communicating in person is richer and communication over phone is richer than just typing text, but balance that with convenience and the person is more likely to stick with it . . . You may be reaching people you wouldn't reach otherwise."

SOURCE: Gregory E. Simon, M.D., psychiatrist and researcher, Group Health Cooperative, Seattle; Kathryn J. Kotrla, M.D., chairman and associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral science, Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine and dean, Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine, Round Rock campus; Aug. 22, 2009, The Lancet
 

Fiver

Member
As far as Instant Messaging goes, it's also nice to know that there's somebody at the other end of the monitor whose green light is on, and you know you won't be a bother if you pop in to say "hey," just to feel a little less alone.
 

ladylore

Account Closed
It's also nice to have an answer to why I use to love to 'chat' so much. Maybe I was unconciously trying to help myself.
 
I would be totally lost without Instant messaging.. It has seen me through some rough times in the past. :)
As Fiver says its knowing you can say hi and feel not so alone in this sometimes crazy world.
 

Banned

Banned
Member
On the far extreme are completely computerized or completely automated programs that don't have to have a human being involved.

I can't imagine trying to interact with something like this.

I LIKE my real human online therapist.
 
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