Comparative effectiveness of social problem-solving therapy and reminiscence therapy as treatments for depression in older adults. |
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Authors: | Arean, Patricia A. Perri, Michael G. Nezu, Arthur M. Schein, Rebecca L. Christopher, Frima Joseph, Thomas X. |
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Abstract: | Compared the effects of 2 psychotherapies based on divergent conceptualizations of depression in later life. 75 older adults diagnosed with major depressive disorder were assigned randomly to problem-solving therapy (PST), reminiscence therapy (RT), or a waiting-list control (WLC) condition. Participants in PST and RT were provided with 12 weekly sessions of group treatment. Dependent measures, taken at baseline, posttreatment, and 3-mo follow-up, included self-report and observer-based assessments of depressive symptomatology. At posttreatment, both the PST and the RT conditions produced significant reductions in depressive symptoms, compared with the WLC group, and PST Ss experienced significantly less depression than RT Ss. Moreover, a significantly greater proportion of Ss in PST vs RT demonstrated sufficient positive change to warrant classification of their depression as improved or in remission at the posttreatment and follow-up evaluations. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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