2008
DOI: 10.1037/a0013309
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Treatment of depression with antidepressants is primarily a psychological treatment.

Abstract: Depression treatment with antidepressants is generally described as evidence-based. However, generalizations to practice recommendations seem to us to rest on the tacit assumption that treatment outcome in research trials is the sum of three factors: specific effects of the drug, expectancy effects (placebo), and spontaneous recovery. Because randomization isolates the specific effects of the drug, trials showing significant drug effects are used as evidence for prescribing the drug regardless of context. Draw… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…. Beyond showing that antidepressants are comparable to placebos in many contexts within depression (Kirsch, 2010;Kirsch et al, 2008), recent studies report that the efficacy of antidepressants in the treatment of depression is due more to patients' experience of their relationship with the prescriber than to the chemical properties of the drug (Ankarberg & Falkenstrom, 2009). These findings underscore the large role that suggestion seems to play in any therapeutic setting, including psychoanalysis.…”
Section: Response To Torem Suggestion Undefined: On the Limitations Omentioning
confidence: 72%
“…. Beyond showing that antidepressants are comparable to placebos in many contexts within depression (Kirsch, 2010;Kirsch et al, 2008), recent studies report that the efficacy of antidepressants in the treatment of depression is due more to patients' experience of their relationship with the prescriber than to the chemical properties of the drug (Ankarberg & Falkenstrom, 2009). These findings underscore the large role that suggestion seems to play in any therapeutic setting, including psychoanalysis.…”
Section: Response To Torem Suggestion Undefined: On the Limitations Omentioning
confidence: 72%
“…While the current study did not include a control group, it may not be concluded with certainty whether this effect occurred as an implication to the therapy or whether it was due to other reasons, including a possible spontaneous recovery from depression (Ankarberg & Falkenström, 2008).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therapeutic professional support is posited to be a primary causative factor for success even in pharmaceutical-mediated symptom reduction, surpassing other medication related factors [27]. The implication is that professional relationships associated with obtaining prescriptions may address cognitive schema patterns, generating a deeper level of change than would be attributable to chemical intervention alone.…”
Section: Relationship Between Medication and Automatic Thoughtsmentioning
confidence: 99%