Efficacy of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy in relation to prior history of depression: randomised controlled trial

Nicole Geschwind*, Frenk Peeters, Marcus Huibers, Jim van Os, Marieke Wichers

*Corresponding author voor dit werk

Onderzoeksoutput: ArticleAcademicpeer review

62 Citaten (Scopus)

Samenvatting

Background

There appears to be consensus that patients with only one or two prior depressive episodes do not benefit from treatment with mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT).

Aims

To investigate whether the effect of MBCT on residual depressive symptoms is contingent on the number of previous depressive episodes (trial number NTR1084).

Method

Currently non-depressed adults with residual depressive symptoms and a history of depression (= 3 episodes: n=59) were randomised to MBCT (n=64) or a waiting list (control: n=66) in an open-label, randomised controlled trial. The main outcome measured was the reduction in residual depressive symptoms (Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, HRSD-17).

Results

Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy was superior to the control condition across subgroups (beta=-0.56, P

Conclusions

Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy reduces residual depressive symptoms irrespective of the number of previous episodes of major depression.

Originele taal-2English
Pagina's (van-tot)320-325
Aantal pagina's6
TijdschriftThe British Journal of Psychiatry
Volume201
Nummer van het tijdschrift4
DOI's
StatusPublished - okt.-2012
Extern gepubliceerdJa

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