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Brief Versus Intensive Psychosocial Treatments for Bipolar Disorder: Time for Stepped Care?

To the Editor: Bipolar disorder presents major challenges: how to manage a complex disorder with finite resources and how to provide standardized treatment. In the June 2014 issue of the Journal, Miklowitz et al. (1) demonstrated that a brief psychoeducational intervention can be as effective as a much longer family-focused therapy involving highly trained therapists, replicating in adolescents what our previous adult studies discovered by comparing brief psychoeducation to cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) (23). Brief psychoeducation requires less staff training to provide and is more convenient for patients to complete. As noted by Simon and Ludman (4), centrally delivered psychosocial interventions offer advantages in standardization, cost, and access, often through telephone or Internet approaches. Weaving these studies and recommendations together, we now have additional support for a stepped-care approach to bipolar disorder, which we proposed earlier: a brief, perhaps centrally delivered psychoeducational intervention of three to six sessions that is offered to all patients with bipolar disorder, followed by selective use of high-intensity services such as CBT or family-focused therapy (5). Screening with tools to detect persistent dysfunctional assumptions or demonstrated family problems by the end of psychoeducational intervention can identify those individuals needing more services; in a similar fashion, additional testing could identify those in need of cognitive remediation or rehabilitation. But starting with the principle of simple, effective, and universal treatments first will help us all balance the need for treatment with inevitable fiscal constraints—and is in the spirit of the Affordable Care Act.

From the University of Toronto, the University Health Network, the Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatments, and Toronto Western Hospital.

Dr. Parikh has received honoraria or research or educational conference grants from AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Canadian Network for Mood and Anxiety Treatments, Canadian Psychiatric Association, Eli Lilly, Lundbeck, Mensante, Pfizer, and Sunovion.

References

1 Miklowitz DJ, Schneck CD, George EL et al.: Pharmacotherapy and family-focused treatment for adolescents with bipolar I and II disorders: a 2-year randomized trial. Am J Psychiatry 2014; 171:658–667LinkGoogle Scholar

2 Parikh SV, Zaretsky A, Beaulieu S et al.: A randomized controlled trial of psychoeducation and cognitive-behavioural therapy in bipolar disorder: a CANMAT Study. J Clin Psychiatry 2012; 73:803–810Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

3 Zaretsky AE, Lancee W, Miller C et al.: Is CBT more effective than psychoeducation in bipolar disorder? Can J Psychiatry 2008; 53:441–448Crossref, MedlineGoogle Scholar

4 Simon GE, Ludman EJ: Should mental health interventions be locally grown or factory-farmed? Am J Psychiatry 2013; 170:362–365LinkGoogle Scholar

5 Parikh SV, Kennedy SH: Integration of patient, provider, and systems treatment approaches in bipolar disorder, in Mood Disorders: A Handbook of Science and Practice. Edited by Power M. London, Wiley, 2004, pp 247–258CrossrefGoogle Scholar