Adjunctive behavioral activation for bipolar I disorder : single case

Background: Bipolar disorder is a negatively impairing and disabling disorder. The depression phase of the disorder is poorly understood and researched, yet individuals spend roughly one-third to half of their lives suffering from depression symptoms. Treatment guidelines suggest the same treatment...

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Main Author: Edda Sigfúsdóttir 1989-
Other Authors: Háskólinn í Reykjavík
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1946/36529
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spelling ftskemman:oai:skemman.is:1946/36529 2023-05-15T16:51:15+02:00 Adjunctive behavioral activation for bipolar I disorder : single case Edda Sigfúsdóttir 1989- Háskólinn í Reykjavík 2020-06 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1946/36529 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/1946/36529 Klínisk sálfræði Meistaraprófsritgerðir Geðhvarfasýki Atferli Clinical psychology Bipolar disorder Behavior Thesis Master's 2020 ftskemman 2022-12-11T06:54:39Z Background: Bipolar disorder is a negatively impairing and disabling disorder. The depression phase of the disorder is poorly understood and researched, yet individuals spend roughly one-third to half of their lives suffering from depression symptoms. Treatment guidelines suggest the same treatment for bipolar depression as for unipolar depression but almost no research has established those treatments for bipolar depression. The question asked is whether a well-known depression treatment, BA, is feasible for bipolar depression. Method: The study is a single case. A 30year old man with bipolar I disorder recruited through the bipolar team at the psychiatric department of The National University Hospital of Iceland received a 11-session modified Behavioral activation (BA) treatment. Symptom severity was assessed and pre-, post- and 1-month follow up measures were done. Results: Depression symptoms declined from moderate to mild/none. Mania symptoms also reduced. Improvement were in suicidal ideation from mild to none as well as improvements in alcohol and drug abuse according to patient, from being inhibitory to no use at all. Conclusion: Although further studies are needed, the current study points to feasibility of BA for bipolar depression. It also reveals, that with the right pharmacological intervention, there is a possible acceptability to modified BA as an intervention to prevent early signs of mania developing further into a manic episode. Keywords: Bipolar disorder, bipolar depression, behavioral activation Thesis Iceland Skemman (Iceland)
institution Open Polar
collection Skemman (Iceland)
op_collection_id ftskemman
language English
topic Klínisk sálfræði
Meistaraprófsritgerðir
Geðhvarfasýki
Atferli
Clinical psychology
Bipolar disorder
Behavior
spellingShingle Klínisk sálfræði
Meistaraprófsritgerðir
Geðhvarfasýki
Atferli
Clinical psychology
Bipolar disorder
Behavior
Edda Sigfúsdóttir 1989-
Adjunctive behavioral activation for bipolar I disorder : single case
topic_facet Klínisk sálfræði
Meistaraprófsritgerðir
Geðhvarfasýki
Atferli
Clinical psychology
Bipolar disorder
Behavior
description Background: Bipolar disorder is a negatively impairing and disabling disorder. The depression phase of the disorder is poorly understood and researched, yet individuals spend roughly one-third to half of their lives suffering from depression symptoms. Treatment guidelines suggest the same treatment for bipolar depression as for unipolar depression but almost no research has established those treatments for bipolar depression. The question asked is whether a well-known depression treatment, BA, is feasible for bipolar depression. Method: The study is a single case. A 30year old man with bipolar I disorder recruited through the bipolar team at the psychiatric department of The National University Hospital of Iceland received a 11-session modified Behavioral activation (BA) treatment. Symptom severity was assessed and pre-, post- and 1-month follow up measures were done. Results: Depression symptoms declined from moderate to mild/none. Mania symptoms also reduced. Improvement were in suicidal ideation from mild to none as well as improvements in alcohol and drug abuse according to patient, from being inhibitory to no use at all. Conclusion: Although further studies are needed, the current study points to feasibility of BA for bipolar depression. It also reveals, that with the right pharmacological intervention, there is a possible acceptability to modified BA as an intervention to prevent early signs of mania developing further into a manic episode. Keywords: Bipolar disorder, bipolar depression, behavioral activation
author2 Háskólinn í Reykjavík
format Thesis
author Edda Sigfúsdóttir 1989-
author_facet Edda Sigfúsdóttir 1989-
author_sort Edda Sigfúsdóttir 1989-
title Adjunctive behavioral activation for bipolar I disorder : single case
title_short Adjunctive behavioral activation for bipolar I disorder : single case
title_full Adjunctive behavioral activation for bipolar I disorder : single case
title_fullStr Adjunctive behavioral activation for bipolar I disorder : single case
title_full_unstemmed Adjunctive behavioral activation for bipolar I disorder : single case
title_sort adjunctive behavioral activation for bipolar i disorder : single case
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/1946/36529
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1946/36529
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