Tele-Interpersonal Psychotherapy Acutely Reduces Depressive Symptoms in Depressed HIV-Infected Rural Persons: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Timothy G Heckman, Bernadette D Heckman, Timothy Anderson, Travis I Lovejoy, John C Markowitz, Ye Shen, Mark Sutton, Timothy G Heckman, Bernadette D Heckman, Timothy Anderson, Travis I Lovejoy, John C Markowitz, Ye Shen, Mark Sutton

Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive rural individuals carry a 1.3-times greater risk of a depressive diagnosis than their urban counterparts. This randomized clinical trial tested whether telephone-administered interpersonal psychotherapy (tele-IPT) acutely relieved depressive symptoms in 132 HIV-infected rural persons from 28 states diagnosed with Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV major depressive disorder (MDD), partially remitted MDD, or dysthymic disorder. Patients were randomized to either 9 sessions of one-on-one tele-IPT (n = 70) or standard care (SC; n = 62). A series of intent-to-treat (ITT), therapy completer, and sensitivity analyses assessed changes in depressive symptoms, interpersonal problems, and social support from pre- to postintervention. Across all analyses, tele-IPT patients reported significantly lower depressive symptoms and interpersonal problems than SC controls; 22% of tele-IPT patients were categorized as a priori "responders" who reported 50% or higher reductions in depressive symptoms compared to only 4% of SC controls in ITT analyses. Brief tele-IPT acutely decreased depressive symptoms and interpersonal problems in depressed rural people living with HIV.

Keywords: HIV; IPT; depression; rural; teletherapy.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Patient Flow Chart Following the Guidelines of the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials. SC = Standard Care;

Source: PubMed

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