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Feasibility and Acceptability of a Positive Psychological Intervention for Patients With Type 2 Diabetes.
DuBois, CM, Millstein, RA, Celano, CM, Wexler, DJ, Huffman, JC
The primary care companion for CNS disorders. 2016;(3)
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Positive psychological attributes (eg, optimism) have been associated with a healthier lifestyle and superior medical outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes; however, there has been minimal study of behavioral interventions that target positive psychological constructs in this population. Accordingly, we developed a novel, telephone-based, 12-week positive psychology intervention and assessed its feasibility and short-term impact in adults with type 2 diabetes and suboptimal health behavior adherence. METHOD This was a pilot and feasibility study in adult inpatients and outpatients at an urban academic medical center recruited between December 2013 and December 2014. Adult patients with (1) type 2 diabetes (meeting American Diabetes Association criteria, eg, glycated hemoglobin A1c [HbA1c] > 6.5% or fasting glucose > 126 mg/dL) and (2) suboptimal adherence (score < 15/18 on the Medical Outcomes Study Specific Adherence Scale items for medication, diet, and exercise) were eligible. Participants received a positive psychology manual, completed exercises (eg, writing a gratitude letter, performing acts of kindness), and reviewed these activities by phone with a study trainer over the 12-week study period. Feasibility and acceptability were assessed via exercise completion rates and postexercise ratings of ease/utility on 0-10 Likert scales. Longer-term efficacy was explored by examining changes in psychological states and health behaviors from baseline to 12 weeks using random-effects regression models and estimates of effect size. RESULTS A total of 15 participants enrolled; 12 participants provided complete baseline and follow-up data and were included in the analyses. Over 90% of these participants completed at least 2 exercises, and 75% completed a majority of the exercises. Participants rated the exercises as helpful (mean = 7.8/10) and easy to complete (mean = 7.1/10), and they reported improvements in optimism, gratitude, depression, anxiety, physical function, self-care, and health behaviors (Cohen d = 0.28-1.00). CONCLUSION A positive psychology intervention for suboptimally adherent patients with type 2 diabetes was feasible, acceptable, and associated with broad pre-post psychological and health behavior improvement in a small initial study. Further testing of this promising intervention is warranted. TRIAL REGISTRATION ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02736084.
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Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT) Effects on Psychoimmunological Factors of Chemically Pulmonary Injured Veterans.
Babamahmoodi, A, Arefnasab, Z, Noorbala, AA, Ghanei, M, Babamahmoodie, F, Alipour, A, Alimohammadian, MH, Riazi Rad, F, Khaze, V, Darabi, H
Iranian journal of allergy, asthma, and immunology. 2015;(1):37-47
Abstract
Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT) as a new therapeutic technique in energy psychology has positive effects on psychological and physiological symptoms, and quality of life. In this research we studied the effect of this treatment on immunological factors. This study tested whether 8-week group sessions of EFT (compared to a wait-list control group) with emphasis on patient's respiratory, psychological and immunological problems in chemically pulmonary injured veterans (N=28) can affect on immunological and psychological factors. Mixed effect linear models indicated that EFT improved mental health (F=79.24, p=0) and health-related quality of life (F=13.89, p=0.001), decreased somatic symptoms (F=5.81, p=0.02), anxiety/insomnia (F=24.03, p<0.001), social dysfunction (F=21.59, p<0.001), frequency and severity of respiratory symptoms (F=20.38, p<0.001), and increased lymphocyte proliferation with nonspecific mitogens Concanavalin A (Con A) (F=14.32, p=0.001) and Phytohemagglutinin (PHA) (F=12.35, p=0.002), and peripheral blood IL-17 (F=9.11, p=0.006). This study provides an initial indication that EFT may be a new therapeutic approach for improving psychological and immunological factors.
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Safety and efficacy of lysergic acid diethylamide-assisted psychotherapy for anxiety associated with life-threatening diseases.
Gasser, P, Holstein, D, Michel, Y, Doblin, R, Yazar-Klosinski, B, Passie, T, Brenneisen, R
The Journal of nervous and mental disease. 2014;(7):513-20
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Abstract
A double-blind, randomized, active placebo-controlled pilot study was conducted to examine safety and efficacy of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD)-assisted psychotherapy in 12 patients with anxiety associated with life-threatening diseases. Treatment included drug-free psychotherapy sessions supplemented by two LSD-assisted psychotherapy sessions 2 to 3 weeks apart. The participants received either 200 μg of LSD (n = 8) or 20 μg of LSD with an open-label crossover to 200 μg of LSD after the initial blinded treatment was unmasked (n = 4). At the 2-month follow-up, positive trends were found via the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) in reductions in trait anxiety (p = 0.033) with an effect size of 1.1, and state anxiety was significantly reduced (p = 0.021) with an effect size of 1.2, with no acute or chronic adverse effects persisting beyond 1 day after treatment or treatment-related serious adverse events. STAI reductions were sustained for 12 months. These results indicate that when administered safely in a methodologically rigorous medically supervised psychotherapeutic setting, LSD can reduce anxiety, suggesting that larger controlled studies are warranted.
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[Clinical and metabolic effectiveness of a new motivational therapy for the treatment of obesity in adolescents (OBEMAT)].
Feliu Rovira, A, París Miró, N, Zaragoza-Jordana, M, Ferré Pallàs, N, Chiné Segura, M, Sabench Pereferrer, F, Escribano Subias, J
Anales de pediatria (Barcelona, Spain : 2003). 2013;(3):157-66
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INTRODUCTION The mainstay of the treatment of childhood obesity is the promotion of behavioural changes, which are especially difficult during adolescence. This paper proposes and evaluates a new motivation-based therapeutic protocol, structured in objectives, which is applicable from paediatric practice. PATIENTS AND METHODS A total of 110 obese adolescents were studied. The therapeutic protocol consisted of 12 monthly visits, in two phases: Motivational and Interventional, in which changes were proposed and objectives were agreed, and later evaluated taking into account the difficulties and achievements. Weight and height was measured in each visit, and blood pressure, waist circumference, glucose, insulin and lipid profile were measured at the beginning and at the end. RESULTS There was a mean decrease of 0.5 SDS in BMI z-score in the adolescents who completed the intervention (78.2%), with this decrease being 0.8 SDS in the group of patients with good response to treatment (75.6%). This group had a significantly lower total cholesterol, LDL, triglycerides, insulin and HOMA index. The main predictor of good response was the success of the motivational phase, with a positive predictive value of 95% (83-98%). CONCLUSIONS BMI z-score decreases and the control of anthropometric and biochemical parameters, show that OBEMAT is a highly effective method compared to those published previously. The response to the motivational phase largely determines the success or failure of the intervention.
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Delivering interventions for depression by using the internet: randomised controlled trial.
Christensen, H, Griffiths, KM, Jorm, AF
BMJ (Clinical research ed.). 2004;(7434):265
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OBJECTIVE To evaluate the efficacy of two internet interventions for community-dwelling individuals with symptoms of depression--a psychoeducation website offering information about depression and an interactive website offering cognitive behaviour therapy. DESIGN Randomised controlled trial. SETTING Internet users in the community, in Canberra, Australia. PARTICIPANTS 525 individuals with increased depressive symptoms recruited by survey and randomly allocated to a website offering information about depression (n = 166) or a cognitive behaviour therapy website (n = 182), or a control intervention using an attention placebo (n = 178). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Change in depression, dysfunctional thoughts; knowledge of medical, psychological, and lifestyle treatments; and knowledge of cognitive behaviour therapy. RESULTS Intention to treat analyses indicated that information about depression and interventions that used cognitive behaviour therapy and were delivered via the internet were more effective than a credible control intervention in reducing symptoms of depression in a community sample. For the intervention that delivered cognitive behaviour therapy the reduction in score on the depression scale of the Center for Epidemiologic Studies was 3.2 (95% confidence interval 0.9 to 5.4). For the "depression literacy" site (BluePages), the reduction was 3.0 (95% confidence interval 0.6 to 5.2). Cognitive behaviour therapy (MoodGYM) reduced dysfunctional thinking and increased knowledge of cognitive behaviour therapy. Depression literacy (BluePages) significantly improved participants' understanding of effective evidence based treatments for depression (P < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS Both cognitive behaviour therapy and psychoeducation delivered via the internet are effective in reducing symptoms of depression.