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Outlines a comprehensive, evidence-based approach to coordinating psychopharmacological and psychotherapeutic treatments
Cognitive Behavioral Psychopharmacology takes an evidence-based approach to demonstrating the advantages of biopsychosocial integration in interventions for the major psychiatric diagnoses. It is the first and only book to translate the current evidence for cognitive behavioral, psychosocial, and pharmacologic approaches to mental health disorders into clear guidance for clinical practice.
There is a burgeoning movement in mental health to acknowledge the entire person’s functioning across physical, psychological and social spheres, and to integrate medical as well as psychological and social interventions to address the entire spectrum of presenting problems. This book bridges a gap in the professional mental health literature on the subject of standalone versus combined treatment approaches. It reviews the current state of integrative care, and makes a strong case that optimal outcomes are best achieved by an awareness of how and why the cognitive-behavioral aspects of prescribed medical and psychological interventions influence treatment. Each disorder-specific chapter is authored by a prescriber and psychotherapist team who consider all the evidence around treatments and combinations, providing outcome conclusions and concise tables of recommended front-line interventions.
The book will appeal to a wide range of mental health professionals, including psychologists, psychiatrists, clinical social workers, licensed professional counselors, marriage and family therapists, and addictions counselors. It also will be of interest to primary care physicians and nurse practitioners who work side by side with mental health professionals.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2017
Cover
Title Page
Notes on Contributors
Note
Foreword
References
Note
Preface
1 Evidence-Based Biopsychosocial Treatment through the Integration of Pharmacotherapy and Psychosocial Therapy
Methodology
Results
The State of the Art of Clinical Research and its Derived Evidence-Based Practice Guidelines
Note
References
2 Psychoses: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment
Historical Perspective
Evidence-Based Findings
Level 1 Evidence: RCTs and Meta-analyses
Level 2 Evidence: Less Well Controlled Trials or High Quality Cohort Studies
Level 3 Evidence: Case Controlled Studies and Reviews
Level 4 Evidence: Case Series, Case Reports, Panel of Experts, Institutional Guidelines
Practice Guidelines
Illustrative Case Studies
Final Observations
References
3 Mood Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder
Review of Depression Prevalence, Typical Course of Illness
Pharmacotherapy of Major Depressive Disorders
Psychosocial Treatments of Major Depressive Disorder
Combined Treatment of Major Depressive Disorder
Conclusions
Final Observations
Illustrative Case Studies
References
4 Mood Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment of Bipolar Disorder
Diagnosis and Acute Management of Mania
Continuing Treatment
Bipolar Depression
Maintenance Phase
Summary
References
5 Mood Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment of Dysthymia and Adjustment Disorder with Depression
Dysthymia
Adjustment Disorder with Depression
References
6 Anxiety Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment
A Brief History of the Treatment of Anxiety Disorders
Integrating Biopsychosocial Treatments of Anxiety Disorders
Final Conclusions and Discussion
Notes
References
7 Personality Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder
Psychopharmacologic Treatment of BPD
Summary of Findings from Psychopharmacological Trials
Psychosocial Treatments of BPD
Summary of Published Data on Psychological Treatment of BPD
Integrating Medication and Psychotherapy
Future Directions
Conclusions
References
8 Sleep Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment of Insomnia
Historical Treatments for Insomnia
Pharmacologic Treatments for Insomnia
Psychosocial Therapy for Insomnia
Integrating Biopsychosocial Treatments for Insomnia
Final Conclusions and Discussion
Notes
References
9 Somatoform Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment of Chronic, Persistent, Nonmalignant Pain
Acute versus Chronic Pain
The Mind/Body Dilemma and Psychogenic Pain
The Biopsychosocial Model of Chronic Pain
Psychosocial Treatment for Pain
Evaluating Efficacy of Pain Treatments
Pharmacological Treatments for Chronic Pain
Efficacy of CBT for Chronic Pain
Summary
Best-Practice Recommendations
Notes
References
10 Eating Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa, Bulimia and Binge Eating Disorder
Pharmacotherapy for Eating Disorders
Psychosocial Interventions in the Treatment of Eating Disorders
Combined Therapy for Eating Disorders
References
11 Childhood and Adolescent Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment of ADHD and Disruptive Disorders
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Oppositional Defiant Disorder
Conduct Disorder
Recommendations for the Treatment of ADHD and Disruptive Disorders
Note
References
12 Geriatric Disorders: Evidence-Based Integrated Biopsychosocial Treatment of Depression, Dementia, and Dementia-Related Disorders in the Elderly
Late-Life Depression
Cognitive Deficits Associated with Dementia
Co-morbid Conditions Associated with Dementia
Conclusions
References
13 Behaviorally Prescribed Psychopharmacology: Beyond Combined Treatments to Coordinated Integrative Therapy
Cognitive-Behavioral Learning Theory and Acquired Psychopathology
Reinforcing and Aversive Properties of Pharmacological Agents
Targeting Symptoms with Specific Cognitive-Behavioral Psychopharmacology Interventions
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index
End User License Agreement
Chapter 1
Table 1.1
Best-practice recommendation criteria.
Table 1.2
Evidence-based findings and derived first-line clinical practice recommendations for the integration of pharmacotherapy and psychosocial therapy in the biopsychosocial treatment of major psychiatric diagnoses.
Table 1.3
The state of research in evidence-based behavioral health treatments of major psychiatric diagnoses.
Chapter 2
Table 2.1
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with psychosis: Summary of best practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 3
Table 3.1
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with major depressive disorders: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 4
Table 4.1
Side effects of medication for bipolar disorder. Adapted from The Management of Bipolar Disorder Working Group (–2010).
Table 4.2
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with bipolar disorders: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 5
Table 5.1
Relative efficacy and tolerability of various antidepressant medications.
Table 5.2
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with dysthymia and adjustment disorder with depression: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 6
Table 6.1
Prevalence of anxiety disorders.
Table 6.2
State of research and derived conclusions on integrative biopsychosocial intervention with anxiety disorders.
Table 6.3
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with anxiety disorders: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 7
Table 7.1
Treatment efficacy/effectiveness research—randomized controlled trials.
Table 7.2
Treatment efficacy/effectiveness research (RCT): Treatment duration.
Table 7.3
Treatment efficacy/effectiveness research (RCT) on shorter treatments of 16 weeks or less duration.
Table 7.4
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with borderline personality disorder: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 8
Table 8.1
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with insomnia: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Table 8.2
Final observations on research and treatment of insomnia.
Chapter 9
Table 9.1
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with chronic pain: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 10
Table 10.1
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with eating disorders: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 11
Table 11.1
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with ADHD, ODD, and CD: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 12
Table 12.1
Integrative biopsychosocial intervention with depression, dementia, and dementia-related disorders in the elderly: Summary of best-practice recommendations by level of confidence derived from strength of evidence.
Chapter 5
Figure 5.1
Network of eligible comparisons for the multiple-treatment meta-analysis for efficacy (response rate). The width of the lines is proportional to the number of trials comparing each pair of treatments, and the size of each node is proportional to the number of randomized participants (sample size). From Cipriani et al. (2009).
Chapter 8
Figure 8.1
Sara’s sleep log before treatment demonstrating an elongated sleep latency.
Figure 8.2
Sara’s actigraph data during treatment. Her bed time has been restricted in order to maximize her sleep efficiency. The actigram is generated from a wrist-worn device and plots the presence and absence of activity over several days. The actigraph output shown here represents regular activity with darker shading, and reduced levels of activity with lighter shading. The period from midnight to 6:00 am corresponds to sleep, with much less motor activity.
Figure 8.3
Sleep log mirroring the actigraph output in Fig. 8.2.
Cover
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E1
Edited by Mark Dana Muse
This edition first published 2018© 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
9781119152569 [Hardback]9781119152576 [ePDF]9781119152583 [ePub]
Cover Design: WileyCover Image: Cover illustration by Gloria Frigola: “The marriage of psychopharmacology and psychotherapy, under the light of evidence-based practice.”
Donald Black, MD, is professor of psychiatry and director of the Psychiatry Residency Training Program at the University of Iowa Carver School of Medicine.
Taylor Bos, MA, was a junior fellow at the National Sleep Foundation before joining the Center for Sleep and Wake Disorders as clinical research coordinator.
James H. Bray, PhD, is former president of the American Psychological Association (APA), and former president of the American Society for the Advancement of Pharmacotherapy.
Christopher Brown, PsyD, ABPP, is a clinical psychologist who has published in the area of the integration of psychotherapy and psychiatric medication.
Ronald T. Brown, PhD, is professor of psychology and university president at the University of North Texas, Dallas. Dr. Brown chaired the APA work group on psychotropic medications for children and adolescents, and coauthored the work group's report in the publication Psychopharmacological, Psychosocial, and Combined Interventions for Childhood Disorders: Evidence Base, Contextual Factors, and Future Directions (2008, APA).
Kelly L. Cozza, MD, is an associate professor of psychiatry at Uniformed Services University, Bethesda, Maryland, and psychiatric consultant to the Department of Psychiatry, Walter Reed Army Medical Center. She is a senior author/editor of the Handbook of AIDS Psychiatry (2010, Oxford University Press) and the Clinical Manual of Drug–Drug Interaction Principles for Medical Practice (2009, American Psychiatric Publishing).
David F. Curtis, PhD, is an associate professor of psychology in the Department of Pediatrics at Baylor College of Medicine. He leads behavior therapy services for children with disruptive behaviors and he is the program director for Pediatric Primary Care Psychology at Texas Children's Hospital in Houston, Texas.
Catherine A. DeGood, DO, is the medical director of the Rhode Island-based Continuum Behavioral Health and faculty at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University. She specializes in treating co-occurring chronic pain and substance use disorders.
Douglas E. DeGood, PhD, now a retired faculty, was previously director of psychology in the Pain Management Clinic at the University of Virginia Health Sciences Center. He has published extensively in the areas of biofeedback and pain assessment and treatment. He is author of The Headache and Neck Pain Workbook (1997, New Harbinger Publications) and senior co-author of The Behavioral Medicine Treatment Planner (1999, Wiley).
Samuel Dutton, PhD, MP, is a prescribing medical psychologist within the US Public Health Service at the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland.
Helene A. Emsellem, MD, is medical director of the Center for Sleep and Wake Disorders and is clinical professor of neurology at George Washington University Medical Center.
Robert M. Julien, PhD, MD, is a retired research pharmacologist and anesthesiologist. His 13th edition of Julien's Primer of Drug Action (2014, Worth) is regarded as a definitive textbook of psychopharmacology.
George Kapalka, PhD, MP, is a pharmacologically trained medical psychologist who has written extensively on childhood disorders. His most recent books are Collaboration between Pediatricians and Pharmacologically-trained Psychologists (2010, Springer) and Treating Disruptive Disorders: A Guide to Psychological, Pharmacological, and Combined Therapies (Clinical Topics in Psychology and Psychiatry (2015, Routledge).
Mary Kelleher, MD, is clinical assistant professor, Department of Psychiatry at New York University. Her recent publications include Dementia and Other Neurocognitive Disorders: An Overview (2015, IGI Global), and Psychosocial Studies of the Individual's Changing Perspectives in Alzheimer's Disease (2015, IGI Global).
Mario Marquez, PhD, MP, is a prescribing child/adolescent medical psychologist in New Mexico. He is former president of the Society for the Advancement of Pharmacotherapy of the APA.
Robert E. McCue, MD,1 was director of the Fellowship in Geriatric Psychiatry program and clinical associate professor of psychiatry at the New York University School of Medicine. He was also deputy chief of psychiatry/director of inpatient services, Woodhull Medical and Mental Health Center.
Kevin McGuinness, PhD, MP, is a retired captain with the United States Public Health Service. Dr Mc Guinness has practiced as a prescribing medical psychologist since 2006. He is a former president of the American Society for the Advancement of Pharmacotherapy.
Mikel Merritt, PhD, MP, is a prescribing medical psychologist with the United States Air Force.
Bret A. Moore, PsyD, MP, is a prescribing medical psychologist with the US Army. He co-edited Pharmacotherapy for Psychologists: Prescribing and Collaborative Roles (2010, APA), as well as the Handbook of Clinical Psychopharmacology for Psychologists (2012, Wiley).
Mark D. Muse, PhD, MP, is a prescribing medical psychologist and past president of the Maryland Academy of Medical Psychologists. He is author/editor of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy: Theoretical Foundations (1996, MENSANA) as well as the Handbook of Clinical Psychopharmacology for Psychologists (2012, Wiley).
Joel Paris, MD, is professor in the Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, and author of Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder: A Guide to Evidence-Based Practice (2010, Guilford Press).
Brenda J. B. Roman, MD, is professor of psychiatry at Wright State University School of Medicine. She is author of numerous book chapters and journal articles, including “Beyond Psychopharmacology for Bipolar Disorder: Psychotherapeutic Interventions for the Patient and Family” (2004).
Marla Sanzone, PhD, MP, is a former president of the Maryland Psychological Association and is a medical psychologist in private practice in Annapolis, Maryland. She has contributed to several books, including her recent chapter “Collaborative Treatment of Eating Disorders” in George Kapalka's (Ed.) Pediatricians and Pharmacologically Trained Psychologists: Practitioner's Guide to Collaborative Treatment (2011, Springer).
David Shearer, PhD, MP, is a civilian prescribing medical psychologist in the primary care clinic at Madigan Army Medical Center. He has researched and written on the topics of integrated psychotherapy and psychopharmacology in primary care settings.
Charles Schulz, MD, is professor of psychiatry at the University of Minnesota, where he has researched and taught on borderline personality disorder.
Peter Smith, PsyD, MP, is president of the Maryland Academy of Medical Psychologists, and chair of the workgroup on clinical psychopharmacology, Maryland Psychological Association.
Stephen M. Stahl, MD, PhD, is an internationally recognized clinician, researcher, and teacher in psychiatry, with subspecialty expertise in psychopharmacology. He has authored many books, including the seminal Stahl's Essential Psychopharmacology (4th ed., 2013, Cambridge University Press).
Randon Welton, MD, is director of the Residency Training Program, Boonshoft School of Medicine, Wright State University.
Tony C. Wu, PhD, ABPP, MP, is a pharmacologically trained medical psychologist and faculty member of clinical psychology, School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Walden University.
1
Deceased.
The need for evidenced-based treatment guidelines is more important than ever, since mental illness affects one in five adults in the US each year, with nearly 10 million adults (4% of the US adult population) suffering with mental disorders serious enough to impact one or more areas of social and occupational functioning. There are nearly 4 million patients with depression followed by primary care in the US, with nearly four out of every five prescriptions for antidepressants being written by nonpsychiatrists. Clinicians and researchers must find a way to evaluate and disseminate the best treatments, individualized for each patient.
Treatments for behavioral and mental health disorders are an evolving area of science and practice that have substantial impact on the people who suffer from them. It is estimated that 47% of the US population will suffer from one or more mental health problem during their lifetime at a cost of over $57 billion (APA, 2016; Kessler et al., 2007 ). Research indicates that up to 25% of patients in primary care suffer from a mood disorder and this substantially impacts other health issues such as diabetes and hypertension (AHRQ, 2017). Prior to the 1990s the major treatments for behavioral health problems were psychotherapies, mainly based on psychodynamic theories, which had little evidence for their effectiveness. There were a few psychotropic medications available and many of them had significant and potentially severe side effects, and could be deadly with 1 month's prescription. The “Decade of the Brain” (Library of Congress/NIMH, 2000; Morris, 2000 ), and the focus on the neural and biological mechanisms of these disorders have radically changed treatment options since the 1990s. At the same time, research on evidence-based psychotherapies has increased, and proved that behavioral and other psychosocial therapies are also effective treatments for many mental health disorders.
Following the development of Prozac and the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), which provided a relatively safe treatment option, there has been a substantial increase in the use of psychotropic medications, especially by nonpsychiatric physicians in the United States (Wang et al., 2005 , 2006 ). The National Institute of Mental Health's (NIMH) “Depression Awareness, Recognition, and Treatment (DART) Program” was a multiphase information and education program designed to educate health professionals and the general public that depressive disorders are prevalent and treatable (Regier et al., 1988 ). Part of the DART program targeted primary care physicians and coincided with the introduction of the SSRIs for treatment of depression. During the same period there was a dramatic decrease in the use of behavioral and other psychosocial therapies, despite evidence that they are effective (Wang et al., 2005 ). The increase in the use of psychotropic medications and decline in behavioral and psychotherapies is also linked to changes in reimbursement and the rise in managed mental healthcare by insurance companies (Phelps, Bray, & Kearney, 2017). The focus on either the exclusive use of psychotropic medications or the preferential use of behavioral therapies has not served the public well, and such a practice results in many people not getting the most effective treatments available. Hence the need for an integrated, evidenced-based approach.
An exciting recent study by Dunlop et al. ( 2017 ) provides enticing evidence that we are at a new and important watershed in our understanding of effective therapies for mental illness. This group has identified how to use imaging techniques like functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to differentiate probable remission of depressive symptoms or failure of treatment with either cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) or medication before treatment by identifying “brain subtypes” in their research sample of patients with depression.
It is not very often that a book comes along that provides a new and innovative way to integrate two areas of science and practice, while providing a comprehensive and valuable review of the literature. Most books on psychopharmacology focus on the neurobiological aspects of medications and their use with specific disorders. There is relatively little about integration of how the psychosocial impact of taking a medication impacts its functioning and effectiveness, nor have psychopharmacology texts seriously looked at the science of prescribing; rather, they tend to focus on the chemical prescribed and its impact on symptoms. In this volume Muse and colleagues break away from the unidimensional, one-sided analysis of psychopharmacology as a stand-alone intervention. Indeed, they go even further by exploring the relative value of psychotherapy, and by integrating psychosocial interventions with pharmacotherapy according to the evidence at hand. There are chapters on each of the major categories of mental and behavioral health problems that review the existing literature and provide recommendations for the appropriate use of psychotropic medications and behavioral therapies for these disorders. What is refreshing is the perspective on the integration of the two approaches, while relying on the existing evidence for making recommendations.
The first chapter by Mark Muse provides an overview and summary of each of the chapters in the book. He provides a conceptual framework to understand the chapters and outlines the criteria for the evidence-based reviews that rely on the recommendations of Sackett, Rosenberg, Gray, Haynes, and Richardson ( 1996 ). He then summarizes the major, first-line recommendations for each of the disorders. This chapter alone is worth the price of the book and is an excellent reference chapter. The remaining chapters provide in-depth coverage of all recommended treatments, first-line, as well as secondary and tertiary treatments, for all major mental conditions that are seen in behavioral health and general medical settings. The last chapter by Dr. Muse provides an innovative perspective on integrating behavioral perspectives and the science of prescribing with psychopharmacology. This book will serve as an important reference for a variety of healthcare providers. All of the many authors who collaborated on this project are to be congratulated for developing a framework on integrating behavioral therapies with psychopharmacology. This integration fits well with the move toward an integrated healthcare system in the United States.
Cognitive Behavioral Psychopharmacology: The Clinical Practice of Evidence-Based Biopsychosocial Integration is an important collaborative step in the push toward a clearer understanding of the interplay between psychopharmacology and psychotherapy, with an ever-diligent eye toward evidence-based decision-making. The chapters follow the format of reviewing the literature concerning effective psychotherapies, psychopharmacological interventions, and combinations of both for each diagnostic category, managing to include the relevant meta-analyses and randomized clinical trials down to case reports, rounded out by discussions of available published clinical guidelines. Outstanding chapters, able to stand alone as definitive reviews for all providers, are those addressing insomnia, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and disruptive disorders in childhood and adolescence, chronic nonmalignant pain, and depression and dementia-related disorders in the elderly. This book is an important milestone in the quest to better predict and achieve therapeutic outcomes in the management of mental illness with well-studied medication and behavioral interventions. It will be exciting to see where the second edition of this important first round will lead us.
James H. Bray, PhDFormer President of the American Psychological Association and American Society for Advancement of Pharmacotherapy.
Kelly L. Cozza, MD, DFAPA, FAPM1 Associate Professor, Department of Psychiatry Director, Psychiatry Clinical Clerkship Scientist, Center for the Study of Traumatic Stress Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences Bethesda, Maryland
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) (2017).
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Dunlop, B. W., Rajendra, J. K., Craighead, W. E., Kelley, M. E., McGrath, C. L., . . . & Mayberg, H. S. (2017). Functional connectivity of the subcallosal cingulate cortex and differential outcomes to treatment with cognitive-behavioral therapy or antidepressant medication for major depressive disorder.
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Kessler, R. C., Angermeyer, M., Anthony, J. C., De Graff, R., Demyttenaere, K., Gasquet, I., . . . & WHO World Mental Health Survey Consortium (2007). Lifetime prevalence and age of onset distributions of mental disorders in the World Health Organization's World Mental health Survey Initiative.
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1
The opinions or assertions contained herein are the private views of the author and are not to be construed as official or as reflecting the views of The Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, the Department of the Navy or the Department of Defense. The author has no conflicts to disclose, and has not received payment nor honorarium for this foreword.
The present volume has had to wait until now to be written because a truly unbiased, evidence-based look at the weighted value of treatments and combinations of treatments within behavioral health has required time to mature while evidence slowly amassed and practitioners' acceptance of the integrated biopsychosocial paradigm increased. We now know, more than ever, that the biopsychosocial model is strongly supported by the data. Indeed, it would be remiss at this stage of our understanding to exclude a priori either medications or psychotherapies when evaluating the effectiveness of the entire array of treatment approaches available for any given condition or patient.
This book brings together experts of renown who have made exhaustive searches of evidence-based studies within their respective specialties, and weighed their findings according to the quality of each study to be able to present to you summaries of their investigations as well as practice recommendations based upon the evidence. In analyzing the data, authors were encouraged to use a system of classification in which each article reviewed was rated according to its strength of design and clarity of findings.
Chapter 1 summarizes all major findings of the individual chapters that comprise this volume, and it culminates in a single table that specifies first-line, integrated approaches for each major diagnosis. Each of the following chapters, authored in large part by teams made up of both prescriber and therapist, targets a specific diagnostic area, and also generates a concise table of detailed findings for its respective domain; within each chapter the reader will find a summary table with not only the first-line treatments for the condition under study, but also alternative treatments that may be indicated for particular nuances of the presenting problem, or because the condition has proved resistant to first-line approaches for a given patient.
The final chapter, Chapter 13, presents a new conceptualization for the integration of pharmacotherapy and psychosocial therapies through behaviorally managed medications. The final chapter departures from the rigorous substantiation of recommendations based on randomized clinical trials and metanalyses found in the previous chapters, as there simply is not, at this juncture, a body of controlled clinical studies investigating the systematic application of behavioral principals of learning in the integration of pharmacotherapy with psychotherapy. Notwithstanding this limitation, the chapter, while falling short of authoritative best-practice recommendations, presents numerous possibilities for innovative prescribing within the cognitive behavioral approach, and presents nine case studies to illustrate the potential of prescribing medications from the cognitive-behavioral paradigm.
The idea of behaviorally prescribed medication as an interface that overarches the integration of pharmacotherapy with psychotherapy provides a new direction of inquiry from which clinical trials might eventually substantiate the basic tenant that learning is the basis of therapeutic change, and that learning can be enhanced by employing conditioning contingencies, based on cognitive-behavioral methods, when prescribing medications.
I am grateful to each and every contributor to this volume. It has been a rare privilege to work with some of the world's sharpest minds, and to learn how they view the practice of integrated biopsychosocial diagnosis and treatment within their specialties. I have received a great deal of support in preparing this book, and my gratitude extends especially to Wiley-Blackwell for believing in the value and uniqueness of the project, and to my colleagues at the Maryland Academy of Medical Psychologists, who provided moral as well as intellectual support.
Special thanks is due Professor Robert McGrath, past president of the American Society for the Advancement of Pharmacotherapy, for reviewing and encouraging Chapter 13.
Mark Dana Muse
Mark D. Muse
The integration of psychotropics into a broader psychosocial therapeutic plan would seem more than justified by previous reviews of the benefits associated with such a multimodal approach to coordinated behavioral health treatment (Reis de Olivera, Schwartz, & Stahl, 2014). It is no longer enough to think along traditional lines of which is the best medication for a particular diagnosis, nor is it sufficient to adhere to one school of psychotherapy and apply it without much regard to diagnosis. Thus, CBT (cognitive-behavioral therapy) for CBT's sake, just as pharmacotherapy as a standalone, would appear to be paradigms with diminished futures. Evidence-based therapeutic strategies argue that treatments, or a combination of treatments, might best be selected according to their relative impact on a certain constellation of symptoms, together with accompanying psychosocial variables, not the least among these being subject variables. Such an approach advocates integrating different biopsychosocial approaches to optimize therapeutic result. In some instances it is a question of selecting one treatment over another, while in the majority of cases it is more a question of combining treatments, and often this means coordinating multimodal therapeutic interventions (Lazarus, 1981).
“Evidence-based” is a lure that does not always provide us with clear-cut distinctions among multiple intervention strategies because, quite often, the evidence is not there. The evidence that is available, and it is substantial, is limited by its designs, which are driven by the interests of the investigators. Medications are largely tested against placebo, while CBT has rarely been pitted head-to-head against other psychosocial therapies, and where this has been done by resurrecting past studies in meta-analyses, the results are confoundingly ambiguous (Tolin, 2010), which is not a state to be cherished in science. Meta-analyses incorporate all of the shortcomings of the original randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that they attempt to digest (Kennedy-Martin, Curtis, Faries, Robinson, & Johnston, 2005; Walker, Hernandez, & Kattan, 2008). Oftentimes, meta-analyses find no difference between medication and psychotherapy, and no discernable advantage among various medications or among different psychotherapies. And, just as obfuscating is the fact that many studies are kept from public knowledge through selective publication, leading to a skewing of data toward a spurious impression of greater effectiveness than might otherwise be the case if all data were reported (Turner, Matthews, Linardatos, Tell, & Rosenthal, 2008). Still, one often finds that CBT is presented as having accumulated substantial data to support it as an efficacious therapy for the majority of psychiatric disorders (Butler, Chapman, Forman, & Beck, 2006), and this is certainly true because the number of studies completed with CBT as the independent variable far outweigh studies conducted on other psychotherapies. However, it is a stretch to say, based on the present data, that CBT is more efficacious than other psychotherapies. Hofmann, Asnaani, Imke, Sawyer, & Fang (2012), in a review of 269 meta-analyses concluded that CBT generally showed higher response rates than other psychosocial therapies, but the nature of the other therapies examined was often vague, and in several cases no superiority of CBT over the other psychosocial approaches was demonstrated, while in at least one case psychodynamic therapy was shown to be superior to CBT; indeed, when psychoanalysis is studied for effectiveness, it compares well with other therapies (de Maat et al., 2013), although the rigor of such studies leaves much to be desired.
What is the researcher, not to mention the clinician hoping to hang his shingle on tangible data, to derive from such a state of affairs? I submit that we have many wonderful meta-analyses that have given us a glimpse of where the truth lies, but we need to go back and design hard-hitting RCTs to fill in the blanks. Perhaps we have mined the data sufficiently at this point, and need more data. Well-designed RCTs that compare head-to-head the different psychosocial therapies are needed, just as are RCTs that pit different medications against psychosocial therapies, and not just placebo-controlled groups. And, the reciprocal influence among various therapies—such as pharmacological agents with other psychotropics (so-called polypharmacy) as well as such agents with a multitude of psychosocial therapies (what analysis of variance calls “interactions”)—is where the hope for integration lies. Having said this, one is often struck by the commonalities of the various therapeutic approaches (Frank & Frank, 1991), be they pharmacologic or psychotherapeutic; and, until we are able to determine more precisely what components of a given approach endow it with an advantage over its brother, we are likely to run a lot of RCTs with equivocal results, since, in the end, the common response to therapeutic intervention, placebo included, is a global one in which patients tend to get better.
For years the movement toward integrating psychopharmacology with psychotherapy has moved forward on sound judgment alone: even with a paucity of substantiating research, a multimodal approach where pharmacotherapy is coordinated with psychological treatments has appeared to make sense at face value. Only recently has sufficient data accumulated to allow evidence-based pronouncements on the value of combining these two approaches, and the data available at this time have vindicated the theory to a large extent, while certain exceptions have also been found. The efficacy of combining pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy as a practice is borne out to a large extent by research; yet, as we shall see in the coming chapters, medication is sometimes contraindicated as an add-on to psychotherapy, and therapy is not always a benefit when added to medication management. As more investigations are completed in the area of biopsychosocial integration, it will become increasingly apparent that a multitude of variables are implicated in outcome, the patient population under consideration being one of the most important (Arnold, 1993).
We have elucidated here, as far as the evidence takes us to date, which combination of treatments is recommendable for each of the major psychiatric diagnoses. Never before has a single volume embarked upon coordinating psychopharmacological and psychotherapeutic treatments for the major psychiatric diagnoses from the evidence-based cognitive-behavioral perspective. Yet, diagnostic categorizations only take us so far, for it is, ultimately, the person whom we are treating, and the appreciation of the importance of patient variables is what distinguishes the astute practitioner from the mere technician.
There is a burgeoning movement in mental health to acknowledge the entire person's functioning across physical, psychological, and social spheres, and to integrate medical as well as psychological and social interventions in order to address the entire spectrum of the patient's life (McHugh & Slavney, 1998; McHugh, 2012a; McHugh, 2012b) presenting problems being, perhaps, the more important aspect of that life to the clinician. This book approaches the movement toward biopsychosocial integrative care from an evidence-based perspective, and goes beyond to offer a new way of conceiving of the interface between pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy by spelling out proven coordinated approaches for all of the major psychiatric diagnoses.
The present volume has attempted to reduce bias by avoiding all pre-established search filters when sifting through the evidence as it exists today, but instead relied heavily on unfettered RCTs and meta-analyses to complete an exhaustive nonquantitative systematic review of the literature (Siwek, Gourlay, & Slawson, 2002). Cognizant of the variability in the quality inherent in clinical trials (Juni, Altman, & Egger, 2001), we endeavored to be all inclusive (Edinger & Cohen, 2013) while, ultimately, distilling our findings in a way that leads to basic best-practice recommendations, based upon evidence and upon the expert opinion of each chapter's authors. While some of the indications in this book arrive at the level of research-validated best practices, others are meant only as a starting place for the clinician to build his or her own therapeutic prescription for a given patient. In any case, we hold to the definition of evidence-based clinical practice as more than the mere application of treatments according to their proven effectiveness in controlled trials; rather, we accept evidence-based practice as “the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients, while integrating individual clinical expertise with the best available external clinical evidence from systematic research” (Sackett et al., 1996).
The chapter authors each collected current research in their respective domain, and categorized the quality of the research according to the following hierarchy:
Level 1a:
Evidence derived from a high-quality meta-analysis of RCTs.
Level 1b:
Evidence derived from at least one well-controlled RCT.
Level 2a:
Evidence derived from at least one randomized study without double-blind controls.
Level 2b:
Evidence derived from at least one controlled, non-randomized quasi-experimental study.
Level 3:
Evidence based on a case study or correlation study.
Level 4:
Evidence based on a committee report or panel of experts.
After weighting and weighing the evidence, best-practice recommendations were arrived at by using the criteria outlined in Table 1.1.
Table 1.1 Best-practice recommendation criteria.
Level of value
Best-practice status
Criteria
Level A
Recommended
Assessment supported by a substantial amount of high-quality evidence (Level 1 or 2) and based upon a consensus of the clinical judgment of the chapter authors
Level B
Suggested
Assessment supported by sparse, but high-grade data (Level 1 or 2), or a substantial amount of low-grade data (Level 3 or 4) and the clinical consensus of the chapter authors
Level C
May be considered
Assessment supported by low-grade data (Level 3 or 4), or the clinical consensus of the chapter authors
The results of each chapter's survey of the evidence, as intriguing and valuable in guiding clinical interventions as they may be, generated varying degrees of confidence. It is a given that no result presented itself with unequivocal certainty, and a great deal is left up to interpretation. The evidence, as might be predicted, was more substantial for the major psychiatric diagnoses (psychosis, mood disorder, anxiety) than for those diagnoses treated within subspecialties (pain, eating disorders, sleep disorders).
We summarize in Table 1.2,1 at the cost of oversimplification, the major findings of the various chapters that comprise this book, keeping in mind that only those practice recommendations that are considered first-line are presented here. Apart from Table 1.2, each chapter presents a more detailed table of its respective findings and practice recommendations; in the summary tables of the individual chapters the reader will find not only first-line treatments for the condition under study, but also alternative treatments that may be suggested for an array of reasons. In developing our recommendations and suggestions, we have remained cognizant of the principle that “first-line” treatments are only a starting point, and that there are numerous circumstances in which an alternative treatment should be considered preferable to the standard first-line approach.
Table 1.2 Evidence-based findings and derived first-line clinical practice recommendations for the integration of pharmacotherapy and psychosocial therapy in the biopsychosocial treatment of major psychiatric diagnoses.
Psychosis
Treatment of psychotic disorders should not be delayed, but begin early in the patient's life, and should involve both medications and psychosocial components that are tailored to each patient's specific needs and circumstances
Antipsychotic medication use is nearly universally indicated in the management of psychoses
CBT is more effective in reducing positive symptoms than in reducing negative symptoms, and is particularly indicated as adjunctive therapy where medication has not improved positive symptoms
There is some evidence that preceding CBT with cognitive remediation (CR) may shorten therapy duration and reduce costs
Relapse after successful initial treatment is prevalent with psychosis, and there is some evidence that cognitive-based and family therapies that specifically target relapse may improve longer outcomes
Major depressive disorders
MILD: Talk therapy should be the primary intervention. CBT, cognitive therapy (CT), and interpersonal therapy (IPT) have been well researched
MODERATE: Combined medication and talk therapy is preferred starting point. If a combined approach is not available, talk therapy and pharmacotherapy are both first-line.
SEVERE WITHOUT PSYCHOTIC FEATURES: First-line interventions include CBT, CT, IPT, selective serotonic reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs), and bupropion
SEVERE WITH PSYCHOTIC FEATURES: SSRI/SNRI augmented with aripiprazole
Bipolar disorder
MANIA: Patients diagnosed with mania should be started on medications with proven efficacy: specifically, carbamazepine, lithium, valproate, and second-generation antipsychotic medications, including aripiprazole, olanzapine, quetiapine, risperidone, and ziprasidone. For severe mania, combinations of mood stabilizers and second-generation antipsychotic medications should be considered, while providing psychoeducation over an extended period. Psychotherapy is not effective in controlling acute mania
DEPRESSION: Electroconvulsive therapy should be considered for severely depressed patients, and for patients with severe mania accompanied by psychotic symptoms, significant suicidality, life-threatening malnutrition, or catatonia, and in those patients who fail to respond to medications. Traditional antidepressants should be avoided since they increase risk of switching to a manic or hypomanic mood
Dysthymia and adjustment disorder
DYSTHYMIA: Combination therapy, consisting of CBT and pharmacotherapy, is first-line treatment for dysthymia
ADJUSTMENT DISORDER with DEPRESSION: The first-line treatment for adjustment disorders is psychotherapy, especially problem-solving therapy (PST). Medications are overused in the primary care setting for treating adjustment disorders
Anxiety disorders
GENERALIZED ANIXETY DISORDER: First-line treatment should be psychotherapeutic, and CBT is a reasonable first choice
SPECIFIC PHOBIAS: First-line treatment for simple phobias should be CBT, with exposure techniques emphasized. No psychotropic medication is recommended on a continuous basis for the treatment of phobias
SOCIAL ANXIETY DISORDER: Social anxiety disorder is more resistant to treatment than other anxiety disorders, and it responds about equally well to pharmacological and psychosocial treatment. SSRIs are considered first-line pharmacological treatment for social anxiety disorder, whereas benzodiazepines or beta blockers may provide effective p.r.n. coverage for performance anxiety. CBT is recommended as a first-line psychosocial treatment, with a group therapy approach particularly indicated
PANIC DISORDER: CBT is the treatment of choice for panic disorder. Psychodynamic therapy should be considered for those patients unable to tolerate CBT for panic disorder
POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER (PTSD): Monotherapy with medication is not indicated with PTSD since there is no drug treatment at this time for this disorder. Psychotherapy is first-line, with CBT and trauma-focused being equally as effective. Medications play only an adjunctive role in the management of PTSD
OBSESSIVE COMPULSIVE DISORDER: CBT is the treatment of choice, and should be prescribed as monotherapy since combining it with pharmacotherapy provides no real advantage
Borderline personality disorder (BPD)
Psychotherapy is the first-line treatment. No given psychosocial approach, however, has proved more effective than other approaches. While dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) and mentalization-based therapy (MBT) have proved effective interventions with BPD, systems training for emotional predictability and problem solving (STEPPS) is a much shorter intervention with similar effectiveness
No medication is indicated for the treatment of BPD,
per se
, and benzodiazapines in particular should be avoided with this patient population.
Sleep disorders
For the treatment of insomnia, CBT for insomnia (CBT-i) techniques should be considered first-line treatment due to the durability of treatment gains and lack of adverse effects associated with such treatment
Of the medications for insomnia, benzodiazepines, Z-drugs, and orexin/hypocretin antagonists appear to have the greatest efficacy, but all of these drugs may cause significant side effects and interact with other medications
Chronic pain disorders
Integration of multidisciplinary approaches is essential to chronic pain management; this entails coordinating combination therapies of CBT with pharmacological approaches, physical therapy, exercise, and nutrition
CBT is first-line intervention for chronic pain, with pharmacological forming an essential, but adjunctive, role for many patients
Antidepressant medication, especially tricyclic medication and mood stabilizers, are considered first-line among pharmacological treatments of chronic pain
Combined therapy is generally indicated over monotherapy for the management of chronic, benign pain
Eating disorders
ANOREXIA NERVOSA: CBT is demonstrated to be the most efficacious first-line treatment for adults. Family psychotherapy is indicated as first-line for children under 16 with the inclusion of CBT and other psychotherapy approaches when the young patient is cognitively and developmentally capable of using these methods. Nutritional education and behavioral intervention are recommended when patients are insufficiently nourished/significantly malnourished such that they are cognitively compromised and unable to make use of psychotherapy. Adding insight-oriented forms of psychosocial intervention to CBT is appropriate when a patient of any age exhibits co-morbidities or life concerns necessitating the integration of interpersonal and dynamic change processes
BULIMIA NERVOSA: First-line treatment should be CBT and interpersonal psychotherapy or, alternatively, DBT when presenting with BPD. Fluoxetine or another SSRI, in combination with psychotherapy, should be considered when co-morbid with depressive and/or anxiety disorders. Family psychotherapy is indicated as first-line for children under 16
BINGE EATING DISORDER: Combination therapy, with CBT plus SSRI, is first-line treatment. If response to CBT and SSRI is insufficient, shift SSRI to SNRI or augment with dopamine norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor (DNRI), provided no self-induced vomiting. Psychostimulants to improve appetite management may be indicated in combination with antidepressant and CBT or other psychosocial therapy
Childhood Disorders: ADHD and behavioral disorders
ATTENTION DEFICIT/HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER (ADHD): There is compelling evidence that combined treatment, consisting of stimulant medication and behavioral management methods, are especially efficacious in the management of ADHD
OPPOSITIONAL DEFIANT DISORDER (ODD): Psychosocial interventions should be first-line treatments for ODD. Behavioral Parent Training (BPT) has demonstrated the greatest benefits and is recommended across all age groups. Problem-solving skills training (PSST) and anger control skills training (ACST) are also well-established interventions, but they typically complement BPT for ages 7 and up. Pharmacological treatments are not recommended as solitary or even combined treatments for ODD due to an inability to reduce core symptoms and risk of negative side effects
CONDUCT DISORDER (CD): The first-line treatment for CD should be psychosocial; CBT is particularly indicated when it incorporates a systemic component that targets patient, parent, and family dynamics
Disorders of elder population: Depression, dementias and cognitive disorders
LATE-LIFE DEPRESSION: Antidepressant for major depressive disorder if ≤ 75 years and no executive dysfunction. May be augmented with aripiprazole. Psychotherapy is indicated, especially CBT, PST, or brief psychodynamic therapy
COGNITIVE DEFICITS OF DEMENTIA: Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChEIs) for Alzheimer's disease, up to 2 years. Memantine + AChEI for moderate–severe Alzheimer's disease. Reality-oriented psychotherapy
DEPRESSION CONCOMITANT WITH DEMENTIA: Antidepressants if major depressive disorder criteria met. Behavioral therapy groups, and effort to enhancing social engagement of patients. Teaching behavioral approaches to residential staff
PSYCHOTIC SYMPTOMS CONCOMITANT WITH DEMENTIA: No interventions meet level A of evidence
BEHAVIORAL SYMPTOMS CONCOMITANT WITH DEMENTIA: Caregiver training and psychoeducational counseling
There is, without a doubt, much left to be discovered in the effectiveness of various approaches for the treatment of mental health diagnoses, conditions, symptoms, and issues, and a recurrent call for greater investigation permeates each and every chapter of this volume. Consequently, what our survey has revealed is that we have a way to go before we identify condition-specific effective and efficacious treatments. Until then, it is reassuring that all treatments, regardless of the condition, tend to be effective to a degree. Globally, medication is about on par with psychotherapy, which is on par with social/family approaches, and many drugs and psychotherapies are equivalent among themselves (Cuijpers, 2016). That is not to say that there are no differences; rather, the differences are less impressive than the similarities. It would seem that any treatment is better than none (Kelly, 1955), including placebo. And let us be clear, placebo is not the absence of treatment, but treatment without any particular intervention.
What we don't know is humbling, but what we do know from previous studies (MacKenzie, 1998; Sinyor, Schaffer, & Levitt, 2010; Soderberg, & Tungstrom, 2007) is that about one-third of patients treated will initially get better, while one-third of those who do not respond to the initial treatment will, in turn, respond to a second treatment, and so on, regardless of the treatment employed. While such results are based on group studies and cannot be translated directly to any given patient or condition, the overall positive outcome, although less than perfect, is of great solace to those trying to help others in need. It is also reason to pause and reflect before championing any given therapeutic school, method, or substance.
That being said, Table 1.2 generally finds that psychotherapy is as effective, while posing less risk of pernicious iatrogenic outcomes, as pharmacotherapy, and, therefore, psychosocial interventions are indicated as first-line treatment over pharmacotherapy in the majority of psychological problems. The exception, in which pharmacotherapy might be considered to trump psychotherapeutic approaches as first-line interventions, consist largely of the treatments of major mood and thought disorders. Combination treatments, on the other hand, are generally indicated for the majority of conditions, with anxiety disorders, adjustment disorders, and personality disorders being the exception. Yet, each condition has its own indications and contraindications, and all are full of caveats.
For example, antipsychotic medication use is generally indicated in the management of psychoses, while combined treatments that involve both medications and psychosocial components are best tailored to each patient's specific need and circumstance. Relapse is particularly prevalent with schizophrenia, and the use of cognitive and family therapies that specifically target relapse should form an integral part of treatment with this patient population. In the treatment of major depression, combined treatments can provide greater benefit when patient expectations are addressed to ensure that there is a realistic understanding of the degree and pacing of improvement; the combined use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) together with CBT should be considered first-line. Bipolar disorder, by and large, requires the use of mood-stabilizing medication during manic episodes, and antidepressant agents (excepting SSRIs and serotonin–norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs)) during the depression phase of the disorder, while psychotherapy is essential as an adjunct for educating the patient on compliance with psychopharmacology and for facilitating a eurhythmic lifestyle. Dysthymia responds best to combination therapy of psychopharmacology and CBT, while adjustment disorder with depressed mood responds well to psychotherapy (especially problem-solving therapy and CBT). Pharmacotherapy should generally be avoided in chronic depression that manifests with a large psychosocial adjustment component, such as in the case of adjustment disorder with depression, as well as in some forms of depression not-otherwise-specified (NOS).
Personality disorders, and more particularly borderline personality disorder (BPD), are best treated with psychosocial approaches, while medication, at best, might be used for co-existing symptoms outside the classic borderline constellation of symptoms; nonetheless, no one psychotherapy has proved more effective than the others used in the treatment of BPD. Chronic benign pain is optimally treated with an integrative, multidisciplinary approach, and CBT is the first-line psychotherapeutic intervention among such a multimodal treatment regimen, with pharmacological interventions forming an essential, but adjunctive, role for many patients. Opioids are of limited utility in the treatment for chronic pain, but should be reserved as a tertiary approach.
For the optimal treatment of insomnia, integrated cognitive-behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-i) with pharmacotherapy, in proper sequencing, appears to provide the most effective response. Pharmacotherapy may initially lead to faster alleviation of symptoms of insomnia but it is typically associated with adverse effects and the return of symptoms upon discontinuation of medications. Supplementing CBT-i with medication, however, can lead to better treatment compliance in the early stages of therapy. Eating disorders respond well to CBT when personality disturbance is not severe. Notwithstanding psychosocial approaches as first-line, combined pharmacotherapy and psychosocial therapies are indicated in most clinical presentations of eating disorders, including bulimia and anorexia. On the other hand, monotherapy with medication alone has not been shown to be effective in long-term treatment in any of the eating disorders, while group therapy is a useful adjunct to individual psychotherapy for all eating disorders, but is not sufficient as monotherapy.
A common factor found across ADHD, oppositional defiant disorder (ODD), and conduct disorder (CD) is that effective interventions rely upon the support of adult caregivers, with the most robust, long-lasting treatment effects achieved when parents and teachers are involved in intervention efforts. Psychostimulants are the gold standard for the pharmacological treatment of ADHD, yet first-line pharmacological intervention is recommended for ADHD only, and is not recommended as monotherapy for either ODD or CD. Psychosocial therapies are considered first-line interventions for ODD and CD, achieving significant positive outcomes with lasting intervention effects. In the treatment of the elderly, with or without dementias or cognitive disorders, evidence shows that antidepressants and psychotherapy are equally efficacious in addressing late-life depression. With demented patients, antidepressants are effective for the treatment of major depressive disorder, particularly with those diagnosed with Alzheimer-related dementia. When treating psychosis associated with cognitive disorders, however, psychosocial/nonpharmacological methods are preferred due to their low side effect profile with this medically vulnerable population. When behavioral disturbances occur concomitant with dementia, nonpharmacological interventions may be the first treatment tried.
In summary, the preceding indications are not meant to be taken as a cookbook. There are, in fact, few specific recommendations, other than pointing out what might be best practices, and other practices that are best avoided. The indications are largely for first-line treatments, with further recommendations when patients are initial nonresponders. However, “difficult” patients, which may make up a sizable part of some challenging practices, require creative thinking, and may justify, indeed, compel the use of minority therapeutic approaches that are not ordinarily recommended, or the occasional implementation of polypharmacy when such practices are best not adopted by default. The individual chapters, dedicated to their respective major disorder or patient population, provide practice guidelines for second- and third-line interventions for just such complex or resistant cases.
Practice guidelines in general vary considerably in quality, and have been noted to reflect in many cases the bias of professional and governmental organizations that devise them (Stricker, Abrahamson, & Bologna, 1999). In this regard, we have given free rein to the experts who author each chapter in this book, knowing full well that bias will exist to a certain degree, but, in avoiding institutional input, we have confided in the individual professionals' assessment of the evidence as they found it in their respective inquiries. If there is an overriding bias to the present volume, it is in insisting on evidence in formulating treatment guidelines rather than on theoretical considerations.
