Patient Experiences of Behavioural Therapy for Bipolar Depression: A33 Qualitative Study

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Date

2025

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Publisher

Wiley

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HYBRID

Green Open Access

Yes

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Abstract

BackgroundAlthough multiple qualitative studies have explored participants' experiences of behavioural activation (BA) for unipolar depression, none have investigated the experiences of BA in people with bipolar depression. This is of particular interest because qualitative studies concerning the experience of receiving therapy can help inform the theory of change underpinning the intervention.AimThe purpose of this study was to explore the experiences and perspectives of individuals with bipolar disorder who received a course of one-to-one BA for bipolar depression. We sought to explore participants' experience of the effects of BA therapy, both proximally and distally.MethodSemi-structured interviews were conducted with nine individuals meeting research diagnostic criteria for bipolar I or II disorder who had received up to 20 sessions of BA adapted for bipolar depression. Thematic analysis using a framework approach was used to explore and describe the experiences of participants.ResultsParticipants' perspectives on the impact of therapy were categorized under four subthemes: client behaviour inside and outside sessions, changes in clients' perspectives, the impact on symptoms and impact on life and functioning.ConclusionsParticipants' accounts of the impact of therapy were broadly consistent with the theory underpinning a behavioural approach. Participants described a central role for perspective change, and particularly increased acceptance of the self and mood states, as facilitating behavioural changes and more distal benefits. Process evaluations embedded in future trials may include quantitative measures of key processes described by our participants, as well as those clearly implied by the behavioural theory of depression.

Description

Yilmaz, Sakir/0000-0003-1896-1742; Hancox, Anna/0000-0002-8211-3134

Keywords

Behavioural Therapy, Bipolar Depression, Patient Experience, behavioural therapy, bipolar depression, patient experience, 150, 610, Article

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine

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WoS Q

Q1

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Q1
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Source

British Journal of Clinical Psychology

Volume

64

Issue

3

Start Page

553

End Page

568
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