Background: Relapse of depression is associated with a criticising attitude of the patient's partner. Aims: To compare the relative efficacy and cost of couple therapy and antidepressant drugs for the treatment and maintenance of people with depression living with a critical partner. Method: A randomised controlled trial of antidepressant drugs v. couple therapy. The subjects were 77 people meeting criteria for depression living with a critical partner. Results: Drop-outs were 5.68% from drug treatment and 15% from couple therapy. Subjects' depression improved in both groups, but couple therapy showed a significant advantage, according to the Beck Depression Inventory, both at the end of treatment and after a second year off treatment. Adding the costs of the interventions to the costs of services used showed there was no appreciable difference between the two treatments. Conclusions: For this group couple therapy is much more acceptable than antidepressant drugs and is at least as efficacious, if not more so, both in the treatment and maintenance phases. It is no more expensive overall. Declaration of interest: Funding from the Medical Research Council.
CITATION STYLE
Leff, J., Vearnals, S., Brewin, C. R., Wolff, G., Alexander, B., Asen, E., … Everitt, B. (2000). The London Depression Intervention Trial. British Journal of Psychiatry, 177(2), 95–100. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.177.2.95
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