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Journal Article

Citation

Whisman MA, Miller IW, Norman WH, Keitner GI. Cognit. Ther. Res. 1995; 19(4): 377-398.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1995, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/BF02230407

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This exploratory study examined the association between level of hopelessness and specific depression symptomatology, patient characteristics, and treatment outcome.

RESULTS from 80 unipolar depressed inpatients suggested that high-hopelessness patients could be discriminated from low-hopelessness patients on hypothesized symptoms of depression, characterized by retarded initiation of voluntary responses (a motivational symptom) and sad affect (an emotional symptom). Moreover, high-hopelessness patients could be discriminated from patients low in hopelessness on the patient characteristics of greater suicidal ideation, social dysfunction, and cognitive dysfunction. Finally, compared to low-hopelessness patients, depressed inpatients high in hopelessness exhibited a poorer outcome to pharmacological and cognitive-behavioral treatment interventions. © 1995 Plenum Publishing Corporation.


Language: en

Keywords

cognition; suicide; treatment; depression; subtypes

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