The Social and Interpersonal Origins of Depression Today

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The Social and Interpersonal Origins of Depression Today

  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9780367458980
  • eISBN:9781000052879

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Description

Originally published as a special issue of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, this collection was timed to coincide with the publication of the new NICE guideline for the treatment of depression, which will shape the context of NHS talking therapy services for the next decade.

In 2005, Professor Lord Layard demonstrated for the first time that mental health should matter to the UK Treasury. Layard showed that the cost of untreated depression was huge due to welfare spending on invalidity benefits, and that this was a social problem rising across the OECD, but more so in the UK. NICE had already published a clinical guideline recommending several talking therapies that were cost-effective. Why could no one still get them? In 2007, under New Labour, the world's first universal free-at-the-point-of-need service was launched to remedy this: IAPT Improving Access to Psychological Therapies.

Thus began a race against depression, predicted by the World Health Organisation to become the leading cause of disability worldwide by 2020. But on the eve of NICE’s new guideline for depression, due in 2021, it is now clear that across large parts of the UK we are set to lose this race. Badly. Why? What went wrong? Clarke, Cundy and Yakeley have brought together a group of researchers and experts in this collection who address some of the fundamental flaws in the policy design for IAPT.

By drawing attention to neglected social and interpersonal origins of depression, pointing us towards more effective approaches, and seeking to pinpoint some of the gaps in thinking during IAPT's first decade, this book offers alternative answers to what still remains Britain’s biggest social problem.

Table of Contents

Guest editorial, Jeremy Clarke
Chapter 1: Epistemological flaws in NICE review methodology and its impact on recommendations for psychodynamic psychotherapies for complex and persistent depression, Susan McPherson, Felicitas Rost, Joel Town, Allan Abbass
Chapter 2: The interpersonal structure of depression, Matthew Ratcliffe
Chapter 3: The active ingredients of dynamic interpersonal therapy (DIT): an exploration of clients’ experiences, Venetia Leonidaki, Alessandra Lemma & Imogen Hobbis
Chapter 4: The process of change in ethnic minority males undergoing psychodynamic psychotherapy: a detailed comparison of two cases, Tohar Dolev, Sigal Zilcha-Mano, Harold Chui, Marna S. Barrett, Kevin S. McCarthy & Jacques P. Barber
Chapter 5: The secret sorrows of men: impact of Dynamic Interpersonal Therapy on ‘masculine depression’, Joanna S. Dognin & Cory K. Chen
Chapter 6: ‘Post-natal’ depression in fathers, or Early Fatherhood Depression, Sameer P. Sarkar
Chapter 7: Influence of childhood trauma on depression in the INDDEP study, Anna Lea Docter, Almut Zeeck, Jörn von Wietersheim & Heinz Weiss