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Section 23 Question 23 | Test | Table of Contents What the guideline is suggesting The NICE depression guideline is a longer document than that on anxiety, and is more prescriptive and detailed. However, it is similar in stating that most help should be offered within primary care, specialist services again being reserved for patients with severe and complex problems. It contains detailed recommendations about medication and the use of electro-convulsive therapy (ECT), but it also gives a central role to various psychological interventions. These can be summarised as follows:
Concerning antidepressant medication, which has been the subject of controversy in recent months, the guideline discourages its use for less severe presentations of depression, but it does recommend that selective serotonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRIs) be used as the first-line treatment of choice for moderate to severe depression, in preference, on grounds of tolerability, to older antidepressants, such as the tricyclics (TCAs), and, on grounds of cost, to psychological treatments. To balance what some readers may think is an inappropriate recommendation, the depression guideline, again like the anxiety guideline, is clear that patients can opt specifically to have psychological treatments in preference to medication. Given this choice, it is easy to imagine that many patients will opt against taking medication, which is increasingly perceived as having problematic side effects. The role of the counsellor in relation to the guideline Defining counselling for the purposes of the guideline was a tricky issue. Should it be taken to mean specifically 'person-centred' counselling, or should we define counselling simply as 'what counsellors do'? It is not always clear even in research studies whether counselling has been very clearly defined, though there are several recent UK studies that suggest promising results for some forms of counselling of patients in primary care, including those suffering with depression. The guideline development group chose to define counselling in terms of a person-centred approach, though we had quite a discussion about this! In practice it seems likely that many counsellors would probably use an eclectic mix of person-centred counselling, CBT and problem-solving as part of a package of care for a depressed client. Fortunately, these different approaches are all endorsed in the guideline! Of course, counsellors do not exclusively practise counselling, however broadly we define this. Within the guideline are several activities that are recommended as intervention options, though it is not specified which members of the primary care team would be best placed to perform them. For instance, an option in mild depression is guided self help based on CBT. This is more than simply giving a person a book, or — as we do in Cardiff — a book prescription. Instead, it implies an active process in which a healthcare professional sits down alongside the patient and tries to engage him or her in the process of reading, or accessing via a personal computer, some form of CRT manual. It is important that the patient's progress — or otherwise — is then reviewed. Would counsellors wish to do this? Befriending is mentioned as a possible additional intervention in the care of people with chronic depression. Although this might seem rather low-tech to some counsellors and psychotherapists, perhaps others would view it as a worthwhile activity? Also in the guideline is a mention of how primary care practices can enhance their overall care of depressed patients. There is reference to telephone support, primarily — though not necessarily solely — in relation to antidepressant medication. Something as simple and quick as a phone call can, it seems, be really helpful in enhancing patient adherence to treatment plans, whether or not these involve medication. Is this a suitable job for counsellors in primary care? It was considered possible, though it is not explicitly stated in the guideline, that graduate mental health workers could take on these roles. Certainly that could be the case in England, but it is impossible here in Wales, since we do not have these staff. Currently my team is working on a proposal for enhanced funding of our trust-wide primary care counselling scheme, on the assumption that some of our counsellors may opt to undertake these extra tasks. We are also basing our argument on the likelihood that there will simply be an increase in the overall demand for counselling by depressed patients, which — if this guideline is taken seriously-should be met. In the area of more severe depression, there are specific recommendations about 'structured psychological interventions of longer duration', namely CBT, IPT and couple-focused therapy. However, the guideline does not specify where, or by whom, these should be delivered. In our own service it is probable that these will be viewed as jobs for CMHT psychologists, but there is no particular reason why they should not be carried out by appropriately trained counsellors in primary care. Clearly, though, this type of psychological intervention would be different from that offered to patients with milder presentations of depression: we are talking here about 16 to 20 sessions over perhaps nine to 12 months, with some patients receiving additional maintenance sessions. Incidentally, though there is a strong sense in the guideline of CBT being the favoured option, it would be wrong to think that this reflects clear evidence of superiority of CBT over the other two treatments in head-to-head trials. It is rather the case that there is simply more evidence collected by proponents of CBT. In conclusion Hughes, Ian; NICE in practice: Some thoughts on delivering the new guideline on depression; Counselling & Psychotherapy Journal; Apr 2005; Vol. 16; Issue 3.
Update Vidal, J., & Soldevilla, J. M. (2023). Effect of compassion-focused therapy on self-criticism and self-soothing: A meta-analysis. The British journal of clinical psychology, 62(1), 70–81. https://doi.org/10.1111/bjc.12394 Personal
Reflection Exercise #9 QUESTION 23
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