Ecosystem focused therapy in poststroke depression: a preliminary study.

TitleEcosystem focused therapy in poststroke depression: a preliminary study.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
AuthorsAlexopoulos GS, Wilkins VM, Marino P, Kanellopoulos D, Reding M, Sirey JAnne, Raue PJ, Ghosh S, O'Dell MW, Kiosses DN
JournalInt J Geriatr Psychiatry
Volume27
Issue10
Pagination1053-60
Date Published2012 Oct
ISSN1099-1166
KeywordsAdaptation, Psychological, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Depressive Disorder, Disability Evaluation, Female, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Patient Education as Topic, Problem Solving, Psychotherapy, Social Support, Stroke, Stroke Rehabilitation
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Poststroke depression (PSD) occurs in the context of abrupt, often catastrophic disability that finds the patient and his or her family unprepared. We developed the ecosystem focused therapy (EFT), a systematic intervention aimed to increase the PSD patient's and his or her ecosystem's abilities to address the "psychosocial storm" of PSD and utilize available treatments effectively and efficiently. This is a preliminary study of its efficacy.

DESIGN: A total of 24 PSD patients were randomly assigned to receive weekly sessions of EFT or a comparison condition consisting of systematic Education on Stroke and Depression and their treatment for 12 weeks.

RESULTS: Ecosystem Focused Therapy may be more efficacious than Education on Stroke and Depression in reducing depressive symptoms and signs, in leading to a higher remission rate, and in ameliorating disability in PSD. Reduction of disability in the early part of the trial mediated later improvement in depressive symptomatology. Similarly, reduction in depressive symptoms and signs early on mediated later improvement in disability.

CONCLUSION: These encouraging findings require replication. Beyond its potential direct benefits in PSD, EFT may provide an appropriate context for efficient and timely administration of pharmacotherapy and of physical, speech, and occupational therapy thus maximizing their efficacy.

DOI10.1002/gps.2822
Alternate JournalInt J Geriatr Psychiatry
PubMed ID22249997
PubMed Central IDPMC3361524
Grant ListP30 MH085943 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States
P30 MH085943-01 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States
R01 MH096685 / MH / NIMH NIH HHS / United States