Moved by movement: A person-centered approach to physical therapy in the treatment of major depression
Abstract
Major depression (MD) is a common and debilitating condition. To expand knowledge on adjunctive treatment perspectives, this thesis explores a physical therapy approach in the treatment of MD.
Specifically, in five studies, the thesis aims to: I) examine the quality of evidence for exercise in the treatment of MD; II) explore depression as an embodied phenomenon; III) evaluate the effects of add-on aerobic exercise or basic body awareness therapy in MD; IV) explore basic body awareness therapy
as experienced by persons with MD; and V) explore experiences of physical therapist-guided aerobic exercise in persons with MD.
Methods: Several methodological approaches were used: a systematic review of 14 randomized
controlled studies (study I), a randomized controlled trial of 62 participants (study III) and qualitative studies using a hermeneutic phenomenological approach (studies II, IV) exploring the experiences of 11 and 15 participants, respectively, and content analysis (study V) exploring the experiences of 13 participants.
Results: Study I showed that aerobic exercise, applied as an add-on strategy compared to treatment-as-usual, had a small significant effect on depression severity. The grading of the quality of evidence was low. Study II showed that the embodiment of depression is experienced as an ambiguous striving
against fading, involving disabling features of feeling confined, estranged and burdensome, but also enabling moments of sensing life and belongingness. Study III showed that a ten-week intervention of aerobic exercise, guided by a physical therapist using a person-centered approach, significantly
improved depression severity and cardiovascular fitness, compared to generic advice on physical activity. Basic body awareness therapy had a significant effect on self-rated depressive symptoms
among participants who followed the protocol. In study IV, the participants’ experiences of basic body awareness therapy were understood as a process of enhanced perceptual openness toward oneself and others – a multidimensional opening toward life. In study V, the participants’ experiences of physical
therapist-guided aerobic exercise were thematically interpreted as setting one’s own capabilities in motion, increasing a sense of aliveness and ability to act. In both study IV and V, the participants described the importance of a collaborative relationship with the physical therapist. To some participants, the sense
of group coherence was also important.
Conclusion: Overall, the findings of this thesis suggest that add-on physical therapy, in particular guided aerobic exercise, mediate changes in the depressed person’s symptoms and self-experience. Collaborative support from the physical therapist was essential in this process, involving an embodied dialogue, perceptive to both the participant’s abilities and vulnerability. Physical therapy has potential to take on a more important role in the primary care rehabilitation of MD, but larger studies with longterm follow-ups are needed.
Parts of work
I. Danielsson L, Noras A-M, Waern M, Carlsson J. Exercise in the treatment of major depression: A systematic review grading the quality of evidence. Physiotherapy Theory and Practice. 2013; 29(8): 573-85. ::doi::10.3109/09593985.2013.774452 II. Danielsson L, Rosberg S. Depression embodied: an ambiguous striving against fading. Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences. 2014, Sep 23 ::PMID::25251165 III. Danielsson L, Papoulias I, Petersson E-L, Carlsson J, Waern M. Exercise or basic
body awareness therapy as add-on treatment for major depression: A controlled study. Journal of Affective Disorders. 2014; 168: 98-106. ::doi::10.1016/j.jad.2014.06.049 IV. Danielsson L, Rosberg S. Opening toward life: experiences of basic body awareness therapy in persons with major depression. International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being. 2015, 10: 27069. ::doi::10.3402/qhw.v10.27069 V. Danielsson L, Kihlbom B, Rosberg S. Capabilities in motion: experiences of
physical therapist-guided aerobic exercise in persons with major depression.
Submitted.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology. Department of Clinical Neuroscience and Rehabilitation
Disputation
Tisdagen den 2 juni 2015, kl. 13.00, Hörsal Arvid Carlsson, Academicum, Medicinaregatan 3
Date of defence
2015-06-02
louise.danielsson@neuro.gu.se
Date
2015-05-12Author
Danielsson, Louise
Keywords
depression
exercise
physical therapy
body awareness
randomized controlled trial
hermeneutic phenomenology
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-9354-5 (hard copy)
978-91-628-9355-2 (e-publication)
Language
eng