15 research outputs found

    The Effectiveness of the Cognitive Behavioral Analysis System of Psychotherapy for Chronic Depression:A Randomized Controlled Trial

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    Background: It is widely agreed that chronic depression is difficult to treat, knowledge about optimal treatment approaches is emerging. Method:A multisite randomized controlled trial was conducted comparing the cognitive behavioral analysis system of psychotherapy (CBASP), a psychotherapy model developed specifically to treat chronic depression (n = 67) with care as usual (CAU; evidence-based treatments, n = 72) over a period of 52 weeks, with 23 sessions on average, in 3 outpatient clinics in the Netherlands. In both arms algorithm-based pharmacotherapy was provided. Patients (aged 18-65) met criteria for a DSM-IV diagnosis of major depressive disorder with diagnostic specifiers (chronic, without interepisode recovery) or with co-occurring dysthymic disorder indicating a chronic course. The Inventory for Depressive Symptomatology (IDS) Self-Report was used as the primary outcome measure. Mixed-effects linear regression analysis was used to compare the changes on the IDS scores between CBASP and CAU. The IDS was administered before treatment, and after 8, 16,32 and 52 weeks. Results: At week 52, patients assigned to CBASP had a greater reduction of depressive symptoms compared to patients assigned to CAU (t = -2.00, p = 0.05). However, CBASP and CAU did not differ from each other on the IDS after 8 weeks (t = 0.49, p = 0.63), 16 weeks (t = -0.03, p = 0.98) and 32 weeks (t = -0.17, p = 0.86) of treatment. Conclusions: This trial shows that CBASP is at least as effective as standard evidence-based treatments for chronic depression. In the long run, CBASP appears to have an added effect. (C) 2014 S. Karger AG, Base

    Solitary bees as pollinators

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    Besides the wind, insects are the main pollinating agents and many of them are hymenopterans. However, among the 20,000 species of bees (Superfamily Apoidea), only a very restricted group has been domesticated for commercial crop pollination, including social and solitary species. The honey bee Apis mellifera L. has been the first domesticated pollinator species, anyway, many cultivated crops benefit largely from the activity of other pollinators, especially when honey bees cannot provide a sufficient pollination service. This occurrence is particularly frequent in crops blooming in early spring or in crops with flowers not enough attractive to honey bees, i.e. because of low nectar and pollen production or for particular flower shapes. In addition to these ecological aspects, which are the result of a long history of coevolution between insects and flowers, modern agriculture and the well-known difficulties that honey bees are suffering of, create new concern that a general decline in the native pollinator populations will have unavoidable consequences on crop production due to insufficient pollination service. The most striking contradiction of the “industrial” extensive monocultures is that on one side they put in forth the need of enormous number of pollinators to satisfy the vast number of flowers contemporarily ready to be pollinated; on the other side, they cancel from the agroecosystem uncultivated meadows, edges and forests, which serve as refuge and conservation areas. The immediate repercussion on pollinating insects is the lack of continuity in blooms: on large areas, flowers are extremely abundant during the short blooming period of the main crops and nearly almost absent in the remaining part of their reproductive season (what is called “green desert”). In addition, very often a dramatic reduction of adequate nesting sites and materials may strongly limit the reproductive success, while, up today, the knowledge about the acute and chronic effects of pesticides on native bees is still insufficient
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