PSYCHOTHERAPIES
Many forms
of psychotherapy, including some short-term (10-20 week)
therapies, can help depressed individuals. "Talking" therapies
help patients gain insight into and resolve their problems
through verbal exchange with the therapist, sometimes
combined with "homework" assignments between
sessions. "Behavioral" therapists
help patients learn how to obtain more satisfaction
and rewards through their own actions and how to unlearn
the behavioral patterns that contribute to or result
from their
depression.
Two of the short-term psychotherapies that
research
has shown helpful for some forms of depression are
interpersonal and
cognitive/behavioral therapies. Interpersonal therapists
focus on the patient's disturbed personal relationships
that both cause and exacerbate (or increase) the
depression. Cognitive/behavioral
therapists help patients change the negative styles
of thinking and behaving often associated with depression.
Psychodynamic
therapies, which are sometimes used to treat depressed
persons, focus on resolving the
patient's
conflicted
feelings. These therapies are often reserved until
the depressive symptoms are significantly improved.
In general,
severe depressive
illnesses, particularly those that are recurrent,
will require medication (or ECT under special conditions)
along with,
or preceding, psychotherapy for the best outcome.
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