## Assessment and Treatment of Depression in Children and Adolescents (ISBN 0-88422-103-2) is a book for practitioners and advanced graduate students preparing to become psychologists, counselors, social workers, and special education teachers who have to cope with depression in disturbed youth.
Fluoxetine in child and adolescent depression: Acute and maintenance treatment
โ Scribed by Graham J. Emslie; A. John Rush; Warren A. Weinberg; Robert A. Kowatch; Tom Carmody; Taryn L. Mayes
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 80 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1091-4269
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The objective was to present naturalistic 1-year follow-up information of 96 child and adolescent outpatients with major depressive disorder who had been randomized in an 8-week double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of fluoxetine. Subjects were children and adolescents, ages 8-18 years, who were entered in a randomized clinical trial of fluoxetine. Following the acute treatment trial, treatment was not controlled. At 6 months and 1 year, the subjects and parents were interviewed using the Kiddie Longitudinal Interval Follow-up Evaluation (K-LIFE) for course of depression. Eighty-seven of the 96 subjects were followed for 1 year. Of these, 74 (85%) recovered from the depressive episode during that time (47 on fluoxetine, 22 on no medication, and 5 on other antidepressants or lithium). Twenty-nine of the subjects (39%) who recovered had a recurrence of depression during the 1-year follow-up, with 55% of these occurring within 6 months. Results of this study are similar to adult studies, with respect to response and recovery of depressive episodes. Most patients (85%) recover from the episode within 1 year, but approximately 40% have a recurrence within 12 months, which is a higher recurrence rate than in adults. Recovery was associated with younger age, lower severity of depressive symptoms, higher family functioning, and fewer comorbid diagnoses. Recurrence, which occurs both on and off medication, was difficult to predict, as there was little clinical data associated with recurrence in this population.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
It has been suggested that serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) may be less effective than tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) in treatment of melancholic depression. We treated 36 depressed ambulatory patients with doxepin or fluoxetine in a double-blind, randomized 6-week trial with placebo run-in.
In this report, we (a) present descriptive information about the extent and the kinds of treatments being provided to depressed adolescents; (b) identify the factors that are related to treatment utilization; and (c) examine whether the provision of treatment during adolescence reduced the risk for