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Autobiographical memory style and clinical outcomes following mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT): An individual patient data meta-analysis

Authors :
Caitlin Hitchcock
Judita Rudokaite
Christina Haag
Shivam D. Patel
Alicia J. Smith
Isla Kuhn
Francoise Jermann
S. Helen Ma
Willem Kuyken
J. MarkG. Williams
Edward Watkins
Claudi L.H. Bockting
Catherine Crane
David Fisher
Tim Dalgleish
Adult Psychiatry
APH - Mental Health
ANS - Mood, Anxiety, Psychosis, Stress & Sleep
APH - Digital Health
APH - Personalized Medicine
Smith, Alicia [0000-0003-2808-3306]
Dalgleish, Tim [0000-0002-7304-2231]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Behav Res Ther, Behaviour research and therapy, 151:104048. Elsevier Limited
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Center for Open Science, 2021.

Abstract

The ability to retrieve specific, single-incident autobiographical memories has been consistently posited as a predictor of recurrent depression. Elucidating the role of autobiographical memory specificity in patient-response to depressive treatments may improve treatment efficacy and facilitate use of science-driven interventions. We used recent methodological advances in individual patient data meta-analysis to determine a) whether memory specificity is improved following mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT), relative to control interventions, and b) whether pre-treatment memory specificity moderates treatment response. All bar one study evaluated MBCT for relapse prevention for depression. Our initial analysis therefore focussed on MBCT datasets only(n = 708), then were repeated including the additional dataset(n = 880). Memory specificity did not significantly differ from baseline to post-treatment for either MBCT and Control interventions. There was no evidence that baseline memory specificity predicted treatment response in terms of symptom-levels, or risk of relapse. Findings raise important questions regarding the role of memory specificity in depressive treatments.

Details

ISSN :
00057967
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Behav Res Ther, Behaviour research and therapy, 151:104048. Elsevier Limited
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d54720fd75cb4661944f45cf9b8a767d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/s98a6