6 results on '"Elgersma, H.J."'
Search Results
2. Cost-effectiveness, cost-utility and the budget impact of antidepressants versus preventive cognitive therapy with or without tapering of antidepressants
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Klein, N.S., Wijnen, B.F.M., Lokkerbol, J., Buskens, E., Elgersma, H.J., Rijsbergen, G.D. van, Slofstra, C., Ormel, J., Dekker, J., Jong, P.J. de, Nolen, W.A., Schene, A.H., Hollon, S.D., Burger, H., Bockting, C.L., Klein, N.S., Wijnen, B.F.M., Lokkerbol, J., Buskens, E., Elgersma, H.J., Rijsbergen, G.D. van, Slofstra, C., Ormel, J., Dekker, J., Jong, P.J. de, Nolen, W.A., Schene, A.H., Hollon, S.D., Burger, H., and Bockting, C.L.
- Abstract
Contains fulltext : 203316.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access), BACKGROUND: As depression has a recurrent course, relapse and recurrence prevention is essential.AimsIn our randomised controlled trial (registered with the Nederlands trial register, identifier: NTR1907), we found that adding preventive cognitive therapy (PCT) to maintenance antidepressants (PCT+AD) yielded substantial protective effects versus antidepressants only in individuals with recurrent depression. Antidepressants were not superior to PCT while tapering antidepressants (PCT/-AD). To inform decision-makers on treatment allocation, we present the corresponding cost-effectiveness, cost-utility and budget impact. METHOD: Data were analysed (n = 289) using a societal perspective with 24-months of follow-up, with depression-free days and quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) as health outcomes. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios were calculated and cost-effectiveness planes and cost-effectiveness acceptability curves were derived to provide information about cost-effectiveness. The budget impact was examined with a health economic simulation model. RESULTS: Mean total costs over 24 months were euro6814, euro10 264 and euro13 282 for AD+PCT, antidepressants only and PCT/-AD, respectively. Compared with antidepressants only, PCT+AD resulted in significant improvements in depression-free days but not QALYs. Health gains did not significantly favour antidepressants only versus PCT/-AD. High probabilities were found that PCT+AD versus antidepressants only and antidepressants only versus PCT/-AD were dominant with low willingness-to-pay thresholds. The budget impact analysis showed decreased societal costs for PCT+AD versus antidepressants only and for antidepressants only versus PCT/-AD. CONCLUSIONS: Adding PCT to antidepressants is cost-effective over 24 months and PCT with guided tapering of antidepressants in long-term users might result in extra costs. Future studies examining costs and effects of antidepressants versus psychological interventions over a longer p
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- 2019
3. Effectiveness of preventive cognitive therapy while tapering antidepressants versus maintenance antidepressant treatment versus their combination in prevention of depressive relapse or recurrence (DRD study): a three-group, multicentre, randomised controlled trial
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Bockting, C.L.H., Klein, N., Elgersma, H.J., Rijsbergen, G.D. van, Slofstra, Christien, Ormel, Johan, Schene, A.H., Hollon, S.D., Burger, Huibert, Bockting, C.L.H., Klein, N., Elgersma, H.J., Rijsbergen, G.D. van, Slofstra, Christien, Ormel, Johan, Schene, A.H., Hollon, S.D., and Burger, Huibert
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext
- Published
- 2018
4. Understanding emotion and emotional scarring in recurrent depression
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Rijsbergen, G.D. van, Hollon, S.D., Elgersma, H.J., Kok, G.D., Dekker, J., Schene, A.H., Bockting, C.L.H., Rijsbergen, G.D. van, Hollon, S.D., Elgersma, H.J., Kok, G.D., Dekker, J., Schene, A.H., and Bockting, C.L.H.
- Abstract
Item does not contain fulltext, BACKGROUND: A single-item assessment of sad mood after remission from MDD is predictive of relapse, yet the mechanisms that play a role in depressive relapse remain poorly understood. METHODS: In 283 patients, remitted from recurrent depression (DSM-IV-TR criteria; HAM-D17 score = 10), we examined emotional scarring, that is, whether the number of previous depressive episodes was associated with higher levels of sad mood as assessed with a 1-item Visual Analogue Mood Scale (VAMS). We then fitted a cross-sectional multivariate regression model to predict sad mood levels, including the Dysfunctional Attitude Scale Version-A, cognitive reactivity (Leiden Index of Depression Sensitivity), Ruminative Response Scale, and Everyday Problem Checklist. RESULTS: Patients with greater numbers of prior episodes experienced higher levels of sad mood after remission. In multivariate regression, intensity of daily stress and dysfunctional beliefs were associated with the VAMS (Adj. R(2)=.091) although not over and above depressive symptomatology (Adj. R(2)=.114). Cognitive reactivity was not associated with sadness. CONCLUSIONS: Our finding that patients with more previous MDEs reported higher levels of sad mood while remitted could be indicative of emotional scarring. Dysfunctional beliefs and intensity of daily stress were associated with sad mood but not over and above residual symptoms. Thus, illness related characteristics especially are associated with sad mood after remission. More negative affect after remission could result in lower stress tolerance or more stress intensity could result in negative affect. Future studies should examine premorbid sadness in a longitudinal cohort, and should study the exact pathway from stress, affect, and cognition to relapse.
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- 2015
5. Disrupting the rhythm of depression: Design and protocol of a randomized controlled trial on preventing relapse using brief cognitive therapy with or without antidepressants
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Bockting, C.L.H. (Claudi), Elgersma, H.J. (Hermien ), Rijsbergen, G.D. (Gerard ), Jonge, P. (Peter) de, Ormel, J. (Johan Hans), Buskens, E. (Erik), Stant, A.D. (Dennis), Jong, P.J. (Peter) de, Peeters, F.P.M.L. (Frenk ), Huibers, M.J.H. (Marcus), Arntz, A. (Arnoud), Muris, P.E.H.M. (Peter), Nolen, W.A. (Willem), Schene, A.H. (Aart), Hollon, S.D. (Steven), Bockting, C.L.H. (Claudi), Elgersma, H.J. (Hermien ), Rijsbergen, G.D. (Gerard ), Jonge, P. (Peter) de, Ormel, J. (Johan Hans), Buskens, E. (Erik), Stant, A.D. (Dennis), Jong, P.J. (Peter) de, Peeters, F.P.M.L. (Frenk ), Huibers, M.J.H. (Marcus), Arntz, A. (Arnoud), Muris, P.E.H.M. (Peter), Nolen, W.A. (Willem), Schene, A.H. (Aart), and Hollon, S.D. (Steven)
- Abstract
Background: Maintenance treatment with antidepressants is the leading strategy to prevent relapse and recurrence in patients with recurrent major depressive disorder (MDD) who have responded to acute treatment with antidepressants (AD). However, in clinical practice most patients (up to 70-80%) are not willing to take this medication after remission or take too low dosages. Moreover, as patients need to take medication for several years, it may not be the most cost-effective strategy. The best established effective and available alternative is brief cognitive therapy (CT). However, it is unclear whether brief CT while tapering antidepressants (AD) is an effective alternative for long term use of AD in recurrent depression. In addition, it is unclear whether the combination of AD to brief CT is beneficial.Methods/design: Therefore, we will compare the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of brief CT while tapering AD to maintenance AD and the combination of CT with maintenance AD. In addition, we examine whether the prophylactic effect of CT was due to CT tackling illness related risk factors for recurrence such as residual symptoms or to its efficacy to modify presumed vulnerability factors of recurrence (e.g. rigid explicit and/or implicit dysfunctional attitudes). This is a multicenter RCT comparing the above treatment scenarios. Remitted patients on AD with at least two previous depressive episodes in the past five years (n = 276) will be recruited. The primary outcome is time related proportion of depression relapse/recurrence during minimal 15 months using DSM-IV-R criteria as assessed by the Structural Clinical Interview for Depression. Secondary outcome: economic evaluation (using a societal perspective) and number, duration and severity of relapses/recurrences.Discussion: This will be the first trial to investigate whether CT is effective in preventing relapse to depression in recurrent depression while tapering antidepressant treatment compared to antidepre
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- 2011
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6. Adding cognitive therapy to dietetic treatment is associated with less relapse in obesity.
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Werrij, M.Q., Werrij, M.Q., Jansen, A.T.M., Mulkens, S., Elgersma, H.J., Ament, A.J.H.A., Hospers, H.J., Werrij, M.Q., Werrij, M.Q., Jansen, A.T.M., Mulkens, S., Elgersma, H.J., Ament, A.J.H.A., and Hospers, H.J.
- Abstract
Objective: The treatment of obesity is universally disappointing; although usually some weight loss is reported directly after treatment, eventual relapse to, or even above, former body weight is common. In this study it is tested whether the addition of cognitive therapy to a standard dietetic treatment for obesity might prevent relapse. It is argued that the addition of cognitive therapy might not only be effective in reducing weight and related concerns, depressed mood, and low self-esteem, but also has an enduring effect that lasts beyond the end of treatment. Methods: Non-eating-disordered overweight and obese participants in a community health center (N=204) were randomly assigned to a group dietetic treatment+cognitive therapy or a group dietetic treatment+physical exercise. Results: Both treatments were quite successful and led to significant decreases in BMI, specific eating psychopathology (binge eating, weight-, shape-, and eating concerns) and general psychopathology (depression, low sell-esteem). In the long run, however, the cognitive dietetic treatment was significantly better than the exercise dietetic treatment; participants in the cognitive dietetic treatment maintained all their weight loss, whereas participants in the physical exercise dietetic treatment regained part (25%) of their lost weight. Conclusion: Cognitive therapy had enduring effects that lasted beyond the end of treatment. This potential prophylactic effect of cognitive therapy is promising; it might be a new strategy to combat the global epidemic of obesity.
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- 2009
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