Doctors have been prescribing books to help treat patients with depression in hopes that reading will help them find connections.
Under a new program that launched in June by Britain’s National Health Service, primary care physicians may recommend specific titles to patients diagnosed with mild to moderate depression.
“Bibliotherapy” is based in
part on research by the Welsh psychiatrist, Dr. Neil Frude, who noticed
that some of his patients had begun reading about their mental health
conditions while awaiting treatment – and some of the self-help books
appeared to help.
British doctors are
prescribing such titles as “Overcoming Depression,” “Mind Over Mood” and
“The Feeling Good Handbook” for patients diagnosed with depression, and
they’re prescribing other books for patients with such conditions as
obsessive-compulsive disorder, phobias, anxiety and eating disorders.
The term bibliotherapy was
first coined in 1916 by the American clergyman Samuel Crothers, who
noticed that books could influence a person’s mood, and physicians and
social workers have been recommending books to help others with their
problems.
But researchers have found
that some self-help books read under a therapist’s supervision are about
as effective for treating depression as individual or group therapy.
Another study found that books
could effectively treat anxiety, even without a therapist’s guidance,
although the effects have been shown to be relatively short-term.
But as budgets for mental
health treatment are slashed in the U.S. and Britain, physicians have
found that books are, quite literally, better than nothing.
Even if recommended titles do
nothing more than crowd out misinformation found in print or online,
doctors say bibliotherapy justifies the cost of the book.
The Reading Agency has also
suggested some fiction and poetry titles for patients with specific
mental health conditions, although the group cautions that its
recommendations are nominated by reading groups and not tested by
scientists.
“I don’t think we could claim
that they are therapy or a substitute for therapy,” said Judith Shipman,
who oversees the group’s Mood-Boosting Books program. “But for those
who don’t quite need therapy, Mood-Boosting Books could be a nice little
lift.”
No comments:
Post a Comment