COGNITIVE behavioural therapy
in classrooms has been found to be
helpful in reducing symptoms of
depression in high risk adolescents,
according to new research
published in the BMJ.
The study involved 1,064 teens
aged between 12 and 16 years who
were randomly assigned to cognitive
behavioural therapy, attention
control, or usual school provision.
The results found that classroom
based cognitive behavioural
therapy programs may result in
increased self awareness and
reporting of depressive symptoms.
Researchers did however warn
that classroom CBT programs
should not be undertaken without
further evaluation and research.The above article was sent to subscribers in Pharmacy Daily's issue from 16 Oct 12 To see the full newsletter, see the embedded issue below or CLICK HERE to download Pharmacy Daily from 16 Oct 12
THE stark health inequalities between Australians living in regional and metro areas have been highlighted in a new report from The Royal Flying Doctor Service (RFDS).
AN “AI explosion” is sweeping Australia’s healthcare sector, signalling the arrival of an “extraordinary era of medicine”, according to a new report from CSIRO.
THE Australian and New Zealand College of Advanced Pharmacy (ANZCAP) has celebrated the 1,000th pharmacist to complete its pharmacy recognition program (PD 24 Nov 2023).
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