187
Participants
Start Date
May 31, 2007
Primary Completion Date
July 31, 2013
Study Completion Date
October 31, 2013
Problem-solving therapy (PST)
The premise of PST is that psychotherapies implicitly help people to become better managers of their lives, in effect, to become better at solving problems. Unlike Case Management (CM) that seeks to increase its clients' availability and utilization of resources, PST focuses on the patients themselves and helps them develop skills in identifying, prioritizing, and solving problems, and thereby creates a sense of empowerment. Although CM and PST have different theoretical premises, they both focus on the resolution of concrete problems promoting depression.
Case management (CM)
Different types of CM exist, but all share the theme of helping individuals cope with their illnesses through linkage to social services, advocacy, rehabilitation, and ongoing support during recovery from illnesses. CM will consist of the following components: 1) socialization to treatment; 2) needs assessment; 3) psychoeducation about depression; 4) service planning; 5) linkage to social services; 6) help with access to health care; 7) advocacy; and 8) exploration of barriers that perpetuate unmet needs.
Weill Medical College of Cornell University, White Plains
University of California - San Francisco, San Francisco
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
NIH
Weill Medical College of Cornell University
OTHER