At a glance
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ODS is a Naturalistic, Open Label, Non-randomized Follow-up Study on Depression and Related Substance Use Disorders (SUD). Study Targets: Efficacy of Psychosocial Treatment, Pharmacogenetics, Inflammation Related Biomarkers
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Behavioral Activation and Motivational Interview for Major Depression and 3 related conditions. Completed, enrolled 242 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Ostrobothnia Depression Study (ODS) was conducted in the South Ostrobothnia hospital district of Finland during 2009-2014. ODS is a naturalistic, open label, non-randomized follow-up study on depression and related substance use disorders (SUD). The study focuses on several aspects concerning the relation of depression and SUDs, the efficacy of selected assessment and treatment protocols, characteristics and genetics of the participants and the use of related biomarkers in clinical practice. The misused substance in focus is alcohol. In this study, dual diagnosis (DD) is defined as the simultaneous presence of clinically diagnosed major depressive disorder (MDD) and alcohol use disorder (AUD). The study was approved by the local ethics committee. Written informed consent was collected from all participants.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
BA consists of at least 4 intervention sessions with a focused, active working style by the therapist. The therapy initiation includes a focused interview targeting at determining 1-2 main problems, on which the therapy will be focused. Specific therapeutic methods for BA include the use ABC analysis, targeting at hitting the negative consequences of current problematic behavior and motivating for change. Further, recognizing the obstacles for change (TRAP) is the next method to be used. The therapist encourages the client for active behavioral monitoring through assigned homework during the therapy process. The final step and method used is strengthening the gained change (ACTION).
Motivational interview (MI) is a therapeutic intervention that focuses on resolving client ambivalence towards changing problematic behavior. MI involves a client-centered approach that encourages the client to develop his or her own motivation. The therapeutic alliance in MI is predominantly a partnership, rather than an expert/client dynamic. MI has been studied primarily in addiction problems, but there are numerous reports of its efficacy in several chronic somatic conditions, and lifestyle problems.