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Telephone Therapy For Depression? Study Says Yes

TelephoneTreating clinical depression on the telephone is nearly as effective as face-to-face consultations, a new Brigham Young University study finds. The trial run included 30 people newly diagnosed with major depression. Instead of eight scheduled visits to the clinic, the participants covered the same material during a series of phone calls with the therapist. Calls varied in length, ranging from 21 to 52 minutes. The patients did not receive antidepressant medication.

At a six month follow-up, 42 percent of participants had recovered from depression. For comparison, similar therapy conducted in person has a 50 percent recovery rate. “Offering a phone or webcam option for psychotherapy does appear warranted from an efficacy point of view,” said Diane Spangler, a BYU psychology professor and a coauthor on the study. “It’s more user- friendly – no commutes, more flexibility of place and time – and has no side effects.”

Over-the-phone therapy may not be for everyone. One-third of eligible participants declined the option for telephone consultations, preferring the psychotherapist’s couch to the one in their living room. But for those comfortable with phone calls, therapy could soon be cheaper, more convenient and minus awkward waiting rooms.

Though a sample of 30 people is not large, the BYU researchers cite a previous antidepressant drug trial that happened to include a telephone counseling component. In that trial, the added benefit from phone counseling matched the results attained by the new BYU study.

Material adapted from Brigham Young University by CFisher.

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About The Author

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Christopher Fisher, PhD
Managing Editor

Dr. Christopher Fisher, Managing Editor for The Behavioral Medicine Report, received his PhD in Clinical Health Psychology & Behavioral Medicine from University of North Texas. His clinical training emphasized a biopsychosocial approaches to health and wellness, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), neurofeedback, biofeedback, cranial electrical stimulation (CES), and QEEG. He is Board Certified in Neurofeedback (BCN) by BCIA. Dr. Fisher also received a master’s degree in Clinical Psychology from Texas A&M - Corpus Christi. Dr. Fisher maintains a private practice in Corpus Christi, Texas, and offers individual therapy, group therapy, and neurofeedback. You can learn more at http://www.christopherfisherphd.com Dr. Fisher enjoys spending time with family, watching sports and movies, and outdoor activities.

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Comments (1)

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    Christopher Fisher, M.A.

    I am honestly not sure what I think of telephone therapy. I know that many people with depression are withdrawn and lonely, and a big part of therapy is the relationship established in-person with the therapist – or least that’s my own belief. I think, however, this is a big plus for people in rural areas where there may be no therapists.

    If I were to offer telephone therapy at some point, I think I would at least try to use video conferencing on the internet to retain the “face-to-face” component of therapy that I believe important.

    Any other therapists have an opinion on this? Or tried telephone therapy with clients/patients?

    Reply

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