mistermack » wrote:Mr.Samsa wrote:
So if you test a drug to a placebo, then test CBT to the active drug (that outperforms the placebo), and find that CBT works better than the active drug, you wouldn't accept the conclusion that CBT is better than the placebo? Wouldn't the very nature of logic necessitate this conclusion? (Not that all CBT trials are done this way, but given what you're suggesting I'm not sure how you can't accept it as a valid conclusion).
I wouldn't count a placebo pill as a suitable placebo for CBT.
It doesn't mirror the mental stimulation of face to face counselling.
But the point is that CBT outperforms antidepressants, which in turn outperforms a placebo. Are you suggesting that antidepressants are better than placebo treatments, but a different kind of "placebo" (CBT) can outperform antidepressants?
Essentially, we know that CBT cannot be a placebo for two reasons: 1) the effect size is far too large, and 2) it lasts for too long (e.g. permanently, in a large number of cases).
mistermack » wrote:Your next answer covered what I meant, that to test CBT, you would have to compare it with a very similar procedure that had no active ingredient.
I did start out by asking if psychology was any better than common-sense counselling, so I would personally compare it to that in a trial, rather than CBT with the salient bits removed.
Somehow, I can't see fake CBT succeeding, the sincerity and enthusiasm just wouldn't be there.
Usually they compare it to some other kind of "well-being" counselling which has been demonstrated to have no clinical effects for a certain condition. This type of counselling is, in effect, CBT without the active component. It avoids the risk you're talking about.
mistermack » wrote:But it seems pretty obvious that regular one-to-one sessions could help in many ways. An incentive to keep taking the tablets could be just one. So of course you would expect CBT to out-perform just a placebo pill.
But this wouldn't explain why, for instance, CBT outperforms cognitive therapy (which is the same as CBT but without the active component).
mistermack » wrote:I would expect CBT combined with antidepressants to outperform just antidepressants as well, for the same reasons.
Well of course two evidence-based treatments at once will outperform a single evidence-based treatment.
Do you understand though, that it is not CBT that supplements medication, but rather the other way around? That is, CBT is the empirically stronger treatment, and far surpasses the results of antidepressants (in both effect size, and in continuing effects).
mistermack » wrote:Mr.Samsa wrote:
Out of interest, what did you think of the metaanalysis I linked you to?
I'm not sure what to make of it. What does the "meta" mean in that context?
A metaanalysis looks at most rigorously conducted studies (usually large scale RCT designs with appropriate controls etc), and combines their results to see what the overall result is for the available data. This is done to avoid the problems associated with single studies, where a result might be a product of chance or some other confounding factor. Importantly, only the most methodologically sound studies are taken, with the weaken studies removed.
mistermack » wrote:Only the conclusions are available free, and the sentence at the end "While limitations of the meta-analytic approach need to be considered in interpreting the results of this review, our findings are consistent with other review methodologies that also provide support for the efficacy CBT." didn't fill me with confidence.
Why not? It's standard science-talk for "Our conclusions are not absolute and subject to change given contradicting evidence". If you're concerned about the validity of metaanalyses, then you can just look at all the individual (statistically significant) studies by themselves. (You'd also need to reject a large number of medical treatments which are prescribed solely because of the results found in metaanalyses). In other words, the common misconception in the public is that RCTs are the strongest form of evidence we have in medical science - this is untrue, metaanalyses are.
mistermack » wrote:But a look at hard data and methodology is the only way that you could draw your own conclusions.
Otherwise, you're limited to agreeing because they said so, and trusting their conclusions blind.
I think it's fair to question the methodology of testing.
You certainly are free to check their methodology, if you do a google scholar search for CBT then you'll find millions of articles with the conclusion that it's a valid treatment, so I'm sure a couple of them will be freely accessible.
mistermack » wrote:With a drug, you have a fixed formula, and it has to jump extensive and well set-out hurdles before it can be prescribed, and it's quality doesn't depend on the person giving it to the patient.
Even then some pretty useless drugs sometimes get through.
Indeed, psychological treatments are the same.
mistermack » wrote:Compare that to a therapy, and almost anything can be changed at any time. It's bound to be less defined.
I'm not sure why you think this is the case? Do you think psychological treatments are just made on the fly, and that therapists can just change any aspect they want?
mistermack » wrote:Mr.Samsa wrote:
As far as I know, the psychologist doesn't impact the effect of CBT at all. This is because the psychologist is irrelevant to the treatment, all they do is teach the person the rules of how to control their own thought processes. Essentially all they do is read instructions from a list. It's because of this that CBT can be, and has been, automated to the point that people can sign up to a website and receive CBT sessions from a computer program - with similar effects to those found by those receiving CBT from a psychologist in person.
OK, I should have read down to this before I wrote the above, but I'll leave it there anyway.
If that can be demonstrated to work, you have a good proof.
But I do note that most use a combination of drug and CBT, which clouds the water again.
I read the arguments given for this, but was neither convinced nor sceptical.
They only use a combination in applied settings, not during the research. The evidence still highlights the fact that CBT is more effective than antidepressants on every measure.
mistermack » wrote:One would have thought that if CBT out-performs drugs in trials, it wouldn't be necessary to combine them.
Hadespussercats' analogy is a good one: antidepressants and CBT is similar to pain killers and physical therapy. The principle behind them is the same, and interestingly the arguments you have against CBT apply to physical therapy too (even more so, since it's often impossible to blind their studies).
Also, I should note, it's not necessary to combine them at all. You get better results, sometimes, if you do though. With cancer, doctors also tend to combine treatments: they excise the tumour and then they provide chemotherapy. Does the combination of the two mean that one doesn't work by itself? Or is it simply a case of medical professionals combining two empirically valid treatments to increase the chances of success in their patient?
mistermack » wrote:But maybe CBT can't make the initial step as well as drugs can.
It certainly weakens the argument though.
How so?
hadespussercats wrote:Mr. Samsa wrote: Psychiatrists - medical doctors who treat mental disorders as if they are physical diseases.
There's no
as if about it-- mental disorders
are physical diseases.
I'm not sure if we're misunderstanding each other, but I can't see how your statement is accurate. By "physical diseases", I'm referring to the idea that mental disorders are a product of a brain disease, malfunction, abnormality, or some other general kind of biological misfire. This idea is obviously incorrect, which is why it was rejected from psychology and psychiatry in the 1950s.
mistermack wrote:hadespussercats » wrote:
Why, when the brain is such a complicated organ, should there be one discipline that covers all aspects of its study?
If mental problems were very clearly defined, so that you could safely say, "this person need psychiatric help" or "psychological help" then keeping the two separate would be good. But it doesn't seem to be the case.
But it is the case. Do you think mental disorders are subjectively defined or something?
mistermack » wrote:Wikipedia wrote:
Psychologists in the United States have campaigned for legislation changes to enable specially trained psychologists to prescribe psychiatric medicine. New legislation in Louisiana and New Mexico has granted those who take an additional masters program in psychopharmacology permission to prescribe medications for mental and emotional disorders in co-ordination with the patient's physician. Louisiana was the second state to provide such legislation.[8]
Also, it seems that a combination of types of therapies is often the most effective.
Not usually, it depends on the symptoms of the disorder. If, like depression, one of the symptoms is the aversion to going outside and talking to people, then it becomes difficult for CBT to work because the patient refuses to go to see the psychologist to learn CBT. Once the patient has seen the therapist for a couple of sessions and learn the basics of CBT, they are usually taken off anti-depressants because they've done their job (i.e. get them out of the house).
“The real question is not whether machines think but whether men do. The mystery which surrounds a thinking machine already surrounds a thinking man.” - B. F. Skinner.