沉思
物理疗法
心情
随机对照试验
医学
认知
萧条(经济学)
人口
心理健康
认知行为疗法
不利影响
临床心理学
心理学
物理医学与康复
精神科
内科学
经济
宏观经济学
环境卫生
作者
Michèle Schmitter,Mikael Rubin,Jasper A. J. Smits,Sofie E. Reijnen,Elianne D. de Ruiter-Blijdorp,Miriam M. A. van den Berg,Revi de Jong-Dinar,Jan Spijker,Janna N. Vrijsen
标识
DOI:10.1080/16506073.2024.2449088
摘要
Exercise directly improves mood and cognition. Providing exercise immediately before cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) sessions may therefore enhance the clinical responsiveness to CBT. The present pilot study examined the feasibility and direction of effect of exercise+CBT versus CBT in depressed outpatients using a stepped wedged design. Thirty-three patients received either group-based CBT (12-16 weeks) or group-based exercise+CBT within specialized mental healthcare settings. Weekly therapist-supervised exercise sessions (45 min, moderate intensity, running/indoor cycling) were provided directly before the CBT sessions, with encouragement for home-exercise. Feasibility was assessed through recruitment, retention, and safety, alongside treatment adherence and treatment effects on clinically relevant outcomes. Recruitment yielded 37% of eligible patients with similar retention rates across conditions. No adverse events were reported. The exercise+CBT condition attended 63% of supervised exercise sessions (72% at moderate/vigorous intensity) and fewer CBT sessions (42%) compared to the CBT condition (54%). The conditions showed similar improvements in depressive symptoms, rumination, and CBT skills over time. Our study shows in a specialized mental health care routine practice population that providing exercise before CBT sessions is feasible, warranting a future randomized controlled trial.
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