Category Archives: Uncategorized

Back to Work or Not?

After just a few quick hours of procrastination, I start looking for materials for a new post. The first promising topic I find is a new intervention that helps short-term disability recipients get back to work. Coincidence? I’ll tell myself that it is.

Suzanne Lagerveld, Roland W. B. Blonk, et al, of Utrecht University dub their cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)-based intervention, “W-CBT”.  Besides treating mental health symptoms generally, it provides a module that focuses on work-related cognitions and returning to work in gradual steps. For their research just published in the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, the authors enlisted employees on short-term disability for mild anxiety and depressive issues. They ruled out those with major depression, post-traumatic stress disorder or physical disabilities. One half of their sample received the new modality and regular CBT was provided to the rest. Per their findings, (PDF here, at least for now), W-CBT got clients back on the job significantly faster. After three months, 15% more W-CBT clients were back to work than clients from the standard CBT group. After six months, that gap increased to 18%. As the authors point out, mental-health absenteeism means lost productivity and profits.  The study’s faster return-to-work (RTW) rate provided a euros-and-cents benefit to Dutch employers, the Netherlands’ economy and society as a whole.

So why doesn’t it feel right?

What if he doesn't want to focus on returning to work ASAP?

Part of informed consent is the client’s freedom in choices about their therapy, including their choice of goals. The article doesn’t address who the client is in W-CBT. Is it the employer, who pays part of the insurance cost?  Or is the employee, who might not want to prioritize RTW? You could argue employees are morally obligated get back to work as fast as possible – if you were their clergyperson. Psychotherapists have a duty not to impose their views on clients, even such widely-held values as a work ethic.

The article states clients were not required to address RTW issues, but that the therapists were encouraged to say things such as, “You won’t recover from your symptoms just by sitting at home. It would probably even get worse.” Per this study, that isn’t necessarily true. According to Lagerveld and Blonk’s  findings, W-CBT and regular CBT had about the same effect on mental health symptoms. If it was once OK to imply symptoms grow worse if one doesn’t race back to the job site, it doesn’t appear ethical anymore.

The researchers are to be congratulated on producing a fascinating conundrum – W-CBT may be simultaneously effective, good, and, at least in some situations, ethically wrong.

Citation:

Work-focused treatment of common mental disorders and return to work: A comparative outcome study. Lagerveld SE, Blonk RW, Brenninkmeijer V, Meij LW, Schaufeli WB. J Occup Health Psychol. 2012 Feb 6.

@ 2012 Jonathan Miller All Rights Reserved

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Herodotus on Psychosomatic Symptoms

From the great historian’s account of the Battle of Marathon:

A strange prodigy likewise happened at this fight. Epizelus, the son of Cuphagoras, an Athenian, was in the thick of the fray, and behaving himself as a brave man should, when suddenly he was stricken with blindness, without blow of sword or dart; and this blindness continued thenceforth during the whole of his after life. The following is the account which he himself, as I have heard, gave of the matter: he said that a gigantic warrior, with a huge beard, which shaded all his shield, stood over against him; but the ghostly semblance passed him by, and slew the man at his side. Such, as I understand, was the tale which Epizelus told.

@2012 Jonathan Miller, all rights reserved

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Stress Management Blogging #1

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Sylvia Plath on Electroconvulsive Therapy, Pt. 2

A description of ECT applied a little better in the mid-1950s, from The Bell Jar, pgs. 213-214: [i]

Through the slits of my eyes, which I didn’t dare open too far, lest the full view strike me dead, I saw the high bed with its white, drumtight sheet, and the machine behind the bed and the masked person  ̶  I couldn’t tell whether it was a man or a woman  ̶  behind the machine, and other masked people flanking the bed on both sides.

Miss Huey helped me climb up and lie down on my back.

“Talk to me,” I said.

Miss Huey began to talk in a low, soothing voice, smoothing salve on my temples and fitting the small electric buttons on either side of my head. “You’ll be perfectly all right, you won’t feel a thing, just bite down…” And she set something on my tongue and in panic I bit down, and darkness wiped me out like chalk on a blackboard.


[i] Harper Perennial Modern Classics edition, ASIN B004N8X6LK

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Bill Maher illustrates the ‘Bias Blindspot’

In the subtitle of his new book, provocative HBO commentator Bill Maher illustrates an interesting cognitive trap. Princeton University’s  Emily Pronin, Daniel Lin and Lee Ross talked with their study subjects and explained cognitive biases such as the better-than-average effect, the halo effect, and the self-serving bias. Everybody got the idea quickly – everybody thought they were less prone to these biases than the average person.  A tip of the hat to Mr. Maher, who at least seems aware of his bias blindspot.

@ 2011-2012 Jonathan Miller All Rights Reserved

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Welcome to the ’Sphere!

“My analyst told me that I was right out of my head.
But I said, ‘Dear doctor, I think that it’s you instead’.”

 

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