Mature audiences only

OnePlusYou Quizzes and Widgets

You have no doubt seen or heard the commercials: "Where does depression hurt? EVERYWHERE. Who does depression hurt? EVERYONE." Mental illnesses can consume you, take over your entire life and hurt everyone around you if you let it. I am no exception.

My life feels like I am stuck riding on a rollercoaster in the middle of a hurricane. I have ups and downs, and I have left a path of destruction in my wake. My sanity dangles on a tiny fragile string, and through this blog I am giving the world a look into my broken mind and my unstable life.

In the end, I am just a girl trying to maintain my sanity in a candy-coated world of misery. Here you'll get a glimpse at just how true those commercials are. Keep your arms and legs inside the blog at all times, hold on tight, and prepare yourself for a very bumpy ride ...

Feel free to comment here on the blog or email me at bpdokc@yahoo.com.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Good Bond Between Therapist, Depressed Patient Aids in Recovery

By HealthDay

A good relationship between a patient and therapist is likely to improve the patient's recovery from depression, a new study finds.

But the outcome of the patient-therapist alliance is often affected by the patient's marriage and occupational status, unusual variations of major depression and coexisting personality disorders (if any), the researchers found.

Researchers from the University of Ghent in Belgium looked at the outcomes of 567 people with major depression who received six months of combined treatment with therapy and antidepressants.

Having a high score on ratings of the patient-therapist relationship four weeks after the start of treatment predicted subsequent progress in the patient's condition.

Next to the patient-therapist alliance, other factors that affected the rate of patient improvement included the initial severity of depression, a history of psychiatric disorders, job status and early improvement of depressive symptoms.

The study was published in the last 2010 issue of the journal Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics.

0 comments:

Bloggapedia, Blog Directory - Find It!Blog Flux Directory

Society Blog Directory


bipolar planetPowered By Ringsurf