Table 1. Nonspecific therapeutic ingredients common to most forms of psychotherapy
Ingredient | Characteristics |
1 Attention | The therapist's full availability for specific times |
2 Disclosure | The patient's opportunity to share thoughts and feelings |
3 High arousal | An emotionally charged, confiding relationship with a helping person |
4 Interpretation | A plausible explanation for the patient's problems and difficulties |
5 Rituals | A procedure that requires the active participation of both patient and therapist |
In both groups, antidepressant drugs were tapered and discontinued. The group that received CBT and WBT had a significantly lower level of residual symptoms after drug discontinuation in comparison with the clinical management group. CBT also resulted in a significantly lower relapse rate (25%) at a 2-year follow-up than did clinical management (80%). At the 6-year follow-up [14], the relapse rate was 40% in the former group and 90% in the latter. Further, the group treated with CBT and WBT had a significantly lower number of recurrences when multiple relapses were taken into account. Even though it was a small and preliminary study, the results were quite impressive: more than half of the patients treated with CBT and WBT were well and drug-free at the 6-year follow-up [14].
The findings were replicated by three independent studies. In a multicenter trial performed in Germany, 180 patients with three or more episodes of major depression were randomized to a combination of CBT, WBT, and mindfulness-based cognitive therapy, or to manualized psychoeducation [15]. Even though the follow-up was limited to 1 year (in our study the most substantial differences emerged later) and medication was continued, there was a significant effect of the experimental condition on the relapse rate of the patients with a high risk of recurrence.
In the United States, Kennard et al. [16] applied the sequential treatment we had introduced in adults [11] to 144 children and adolescents with major depression. They were treated with fluoxetine for 6 weeks, and those who displayed an adequate response were randomized to receive continued medication management or CBT to address residual symptoms and WBT in addition to fluoxetine. The CBT/WBT combination was effective in reducing the risk of relapse, a finding that was quite exceptional in the literature concerned with children and adolescents with major depression. Unfortunately, unlike in our original study [11], medication was continued also in the CBT/WBT group, despite the problems that are related to long-term treatment with antidepressant drugs in that patient population [17].
A third confirmation came from an Iranian study by Moeenizadeh and Salagame [18]. Forty high school and university students suffering from depression were randomly assigned to WBT or CBT. The results unequivocally showed that WBT was more effective than CBT in improving symptoms of depression [18]. The severity of the depressive disturbances was not specifically evaluated and the symptomatology was probably mild. Nonetheless, the results were quite impressive.
Understanding the Specificity of Well-Being Therapy
My research group was very pleased with the results obtained with our approach to recurrent depression [11, 14]. In discussing the data with Chiara Rafanelli, who had performed all psychological evaluations blind to the treatment assignments, an important issue came up. What was the specific role of WBT? In our previous study that did not involve WBT [6, 9, 10], the results had been less positive, but this did not necessarily mean that WBT was responsible for them.
Chiara Rafanelli and I thus decided to perform another controlled investigation. The object of our study this time was a very common form of anxiety, GAD. We had come to the conclusion that probably the sequential combination of CBT and WBT was our best bet in an acute disorder, but was this combination going to be better than just performing CBT? Twenty patients with GAD were randomly assigned to 8 sessions of CBT or the sequential administration of CBT followed by another 4 sessions of WBT [19]. Both treatments were associated with a significant reduction of anxiety. However, significant advantages of the CBT/WBT sequential combination over CBT were observed, both in terms of symptom reduction and psychological well-being improvement as measured by CID [2], PWB [1], and SQ [3]. These results suggested the feasibility and clinical advantages of adding WBT to the treatment of GAD. A possible explanation of these findings is that self-monitoring of episodes of well-being may lead to a more comprehensive identification of automatic thoughts than that entailed by the customary monitoring of episodes of distress in cognitive therapy [