Behavioral activation for mildly depressed students: randomized controlled trial

Although depression is prevalent among university students, limited and dated research has examined the efficacy of behavioral interventions in treating this population. Based on a modified version of the Behavioral Activation Treatment for Depression (BATD; Hopko & Lejuez, 2007; Lejuez, Hopko,...

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Main Author: Gawrysiak, Michael John
Published: Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/381
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spelling ndltd-UTENN-oai-trace.tennessee.edu-utk_gradthes-14142011-12-13T16:12:20Z Behavioral activation for mildly depressed students: randomized controlled trial Gawrysiak, Michael John Although depression is prevalent among university students, limited and dated research has examined the efficacy of behavioral interventions in treating this population. Based on a modified version of the Behavioral Activation Treatment for Depression (BATD; Hopko & Lejuez, 2007; Lejuez, Hopko, & Hopko, 2001) that involved a structured single-session intervention and 2- week treatment period, we conducted a randomized controlled trial comparing individualized BATD and a no-treatment control for university students with mild to moderate depression symptoms (N = 30). Outcome measures assessed depression severity, environmental reward, social support, and somatic anxiety. Repeated measures analyses of variance and reliable change indices indicated that individuals in the BATD group had significantly greater reductions in depression and increased environmental reward at post-treatment relative to the control group. A statistical trend also suggested BATD may show promise toward increasing social support. Given current conditions in many academic institutions that include high demand for mental health services, limited personnel, and time restrictions, brief and parsimonious interventions such as BATD may represent a viable treatment option. Study limitations and future directions are discussed. 2008-12-01 text http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/381 Masters Theses Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Psychology
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology
spellingShingle Psychology
Gawrysiak, Michael John
Behavioral activation for mildly depressed students: randomized controlled trial
description Although depression is prevalent among university students, limited and dated research has examined the efficacy of behavioral interventions in treating this population. Based on a modified version of the Behavioral Activation Treatment for Depression (BATD; Hopko & Lejuez, 2007; Lejuez, Hopko, & Hopko, 2001) that involved a structured single-session intervention and 2- week treatment period, we conducted a randomized controlled trial comparing individualized BATD and a no-treatment control for university students with mild to moderate depression symptoms (N = 30). Outcome measures assessed depression severity, environmental reward, social support, and somatic anxiety. Repeated measures analyses of variance and reliable change indices indicated that individuals in the BATD group had significantly greater reductions in depression and increased environmental reward at post-treatment relative to the control group. A statistical trend also suggested BATD may show promise toward increasing social support. Given current conditions in many academic institutions that include high demand for mental health services, limited personnel, and time restrictions, brief and parsimonious interventions such as BATD may represent a viable treatment option. Study limitations and future directions are discussed.
author Gawrysiak, Michael John
author_facet Gawrysiak, Michael John
author_sort Gawrysiak, Michael John
title Behavioral activation for mildly depressed students: randomized controlled trial
title_short Behavioral activation for mildly depressed students: randomized controlled trial
title_full Behavioral activation for mildly depressed students: randomized controlled trial
title_fullStr Behavioral activation for mildly depressed students: randomized controlled trial
title_full_unstemmed Behavioral activation for mildly depressed students: randomized controlled trial
title_sort behavioral activation for mildly depressed students: randomized controlled trial
publisher Trace: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange
publishDate 2008
url http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/381
work_keys_str_mv AT gawrysiakmichaeljohn behavioralactivationformildlydepressedstudentsrandomizedcontrolledtrial
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