Religious versus Conventional Psychotherapy for Major Depression in Patients with Chronic Medical Illness: Rationale, Methods, and Preliminary Results.

dc.contributor.author

Koenig, Harold G

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United States

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2017-08-25T15:53:44Z

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2017-08-25T15:53:44Z

dc.date.issued

2012

dc.description.abstract

This paper (1) reviews the physical and religious barriers to CBT that disabled medically ill-depressed patients face, (2) discusses research on the relationship between religion and depression-induced physiological changes, (3) describes an ongoing randomized clinical trial of religious versus secular CBT in chronically ill patients with mild-to-moderate major depression designed to (a) overcome physical and religious barriers to CBT and (b) compare the efficacy of religious versus secular CBT in relieving depression and improving immune and endocrine functions, and (4) presents preliminary results that illustrate the technical difficulties that have been encountered in implementing this trial. CBT is being delivered remotely via instant messaging, telephone, or Skype, and Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, and Hindu versions of religious CBT are being developed. The preliminary results described here are particular to the technologies employed in this study and are not results from the CBT clinical trial whose findings will be published in the future after the study ends and data are analyzed. The ultimate goal is to determine if a psychotherapy delivered remotely that integrates patients' religious resources improves depression more quickly than a therapy that ignores them, and whether religious CBT is more effective than conventional CBT in reversing depression-induced physiological changes.

dc.identifier

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22778932

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2090-133X

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/15357

dc.language

eng

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Hindawi Limited

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Depress Res Treat

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10.1155/2012/460419

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Religious versus Conventional Psychotherapy for Major Depression in Patients with Chronic Medical Illness: Rationale, Methods, and Preliminary Results.

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.author-url

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22778932

pubs.begin-page

460419

pubs.organisational-group

Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development

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Clinical Science Departments

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Duke

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Institutes and Centers

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Medicine

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Medicine, Geriatrics

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Geriatric Behavioral Health

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School of Medicine

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

2012

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