Back to Basics: Lifestyle Interventions for Adolescent Depression : Harvard Review of Psychiatry

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Back to Basics: Lifestyle Interventions for Adolescent Depression

Benheim, Talia S. BA; Dalal, Michelle MD; Holcomb, Juliana M. BA; Dutta, Anamika BA; Hosker, Daniel MD; Jellinek, Michael S. MD; Murphy, J. Michael EdD

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Harvard Review of Psychiatry 30(5):p 283-302, 9/10 2022. | DOI: 10.1097/HRP.0000000000000343

Abstract

Learning objectives 

After completing this activity, practitioners will be better able to:

• Discuss and better understand the recently adopted screening standards for adolescents with depression and the potential advantages of using “lifestyle medicine”

• Set up a process for providing effective interventions for the increased number of patients with adolescent depression

• Design or update their toolbox of treatment options for adolescents with depression based on the new literature and increased demand

Recently adopted quality standards recommend that pediatricians screen adolescents for depression and that they document follow-up plans for those who screen positive. As a result of these new recommendations, pediatricians and other pediatric providers, as well as psychiatrists and other mental health professionals, may face an increasing number of referrals and a growing need for effective interventions for adolescent depression. Given the widely acknowledged scarcity of traditional mental health resources, the current study reviewed the rapidly expanding array of evidence-based, but nontraditional, interventions applicable to outpatient pediatric and mental health care settings. Many of these interventions come from a lifestyle medicine framework. Lifestyle medicine interventions are congruent with the cultures of pediatrics and outpatient psychiatry, and offer additional evidence-based tools for providers managing adolescent depression. These interventions can be implemented individually or within group or community settings, and may be used in conjunction with more common interventions such as psychotherapy or psychotropic medications.

© 2022 President and Fellows of Harvard College

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