News

Symptom summary worksheets alert patients to signs of mania, depression


 

EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF PSYCHIATRISTS MEETING

SAN ANTONIO – Don’t underestimate the value of a symptom summary worksheet when it comes to working with patients with bipolar disorder, Dr. Jesse H. Wright advised.

The symptom summary worksheet is a powerful tool for helping a patient learn to recognize the signs of an impending shift toward hypomania or depression, Dr. Wright said at the annual meeting of the American College of Psychiatrists.

The purpose of the worksheet is to help the patient and/or family members develop a customized list of early signs that such a shift is occurring, said Dr. Wright, professor and director of the depression center at the University of Louisville (Ky.).

Dr. Jesse Wright

The idea is to help the patient become more attuned to those signs, and to develop cognitive-behavioral or medication strategies that might interrupt the escalation into full-blown mania or very deep depression, he said during a workshop on cognitive-behavioral therapy for brief sessions.

Brief-session CBT can be useful in patients with bipolar disorder, and a review of the symptom summary worksheet can be incorporated into the session, he said.

"We want them to develop a skill set so that when they start to see something happening, they have something to do for it," he added.

Dr. Donna M. Sudak, who conducted the CBT workshop along with Dr. Wright, cautioned that symptom summary worksheets won’t necessarily have an immediate impact.

"It may not work the first time, but over time, as people really begin to develop the capacity to look at the onset of symptoms and catch it earlier, it’s really pretty remarkable. ... I call it an ‘early warning system,’ " said Dr. Sudak, professor and director of the psychotherapy training program at Drexel University, Philadelphia.

Dr. Donna Sudak

A simple example provided by Dr. Wright involved a patient who starts going to bed an hour later than usual and who spends that time surfing the Web, which gets her "worked up about new business ideas." This leads to sleep disruption, and she begins to escalate.

Monitoring this behavior allows for a plan to be put into place to address sleep hygiene issues when they arise.

"If she’s willing to do that, it might interrupt full-blown mania," Dr. Wright said.

Dr. Sudak and Dr. Wright are two of four coauthors of the book, "High-Yield Cognitive-Behavior Therapy for Brief Sessions: An Illustrated Guide (Washington: American Psychiatric Publishing, 2010). They both receive book royalties from American Psychiatric Publishing; Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins; and John Wiley & Sons. Dr. Sudak also serves on an editorial board, receives honoraria from Elsevier, and is a consultant for Takeda Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Wright also receives royalties for the development of software (Empower Interactive, Mindstreet).

Recommended Reading

Smoking rate among people with mental illness shows negligible decline
MDedge Psychiatry
Smoking cessation maintained with varenicline plus CBT
MDedge Psychiatry
Treating pediatric bipolar disorder means leaning on adult data
MDedge Psychiatry
Increased functional connectivity found on brain MRIs of euthymic bipolar patients
MDedge Psychiatry
Parents with bipolar who understand condition watch for it in their children
MDedge Psychiatry
Hypomania less than 4 days does not rule out bipolar II disorder
MDedge Psychiatry
Depression, not cognitive deficits, improves with sleep loss in bipolar I
MDedge Psychiatry
Emotion regulation strategies distinguish borderline, bipolar II
MDedge Psychiatry
Brain tractography finds white matter abnormalities in bipolar I patients
MDedge Psychiatry
Health care reform may cut behavioral admissions
MDedge Psychiatry