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Complementary Therapies for Depression

Depression has a prevalence of 5% in the general population. It is estimated that at least one third of all individuals are likely to experience an episode of depression during their lifetime. Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is often negatively defined, for

Complementary and alternative therapies (CATs) are popular. In 1991, 34% of the US adult population used at least 1 such therapy for 1 year. This figure has now risen to 40%. (10) Twenty percent of those

Forty-two percent of 115 Danish psychiatric inpatients had used CATs at least once, with herbal medicine being the most frequent type. (11) Herbal remedies, homeopathy, acupuncture, massage, relaxation, and unconventional psychotherapeutic approaches have been reported (<12">12) as the most prevalent CATs among depression, alternative treatments, complementary, herbal, herbs, accupuncture, aromatherapy, homeopathy, exercise, massage, St John's wort, St John wort, St John's wart, Hypericum perforatum

ACUPUNCTURE
Acupuncture is an ancient Chinese treatment. Based on the belief that 2 types of "energies" flow in

Electroacupuncture appears to have greater efficacy than traditional acupuncture, and the preliminary results

Two clinical trials compare the effects of electroacupuncture and amitriptyline hydrochloride in depressed

HERBAL MEDICINE
Medical herbalism (also termed phytotherapy in Europe) is the treatment of illness with plants, parts of plants, or plant extracts. It has a long history in all medical cultures, and many of our modern drugs have been

Scattered references (33,34) occur in the ethnobotanical literature to plants used by indigenous peoples to treat depression. In China, herbal remedies are often used in combination with conventional western drug

Lay books on CAM (15-18) claim a variety of plants to be helpful in depression, eg, wild oats, lemon balm, ginseng, wood betony, basil, and St John's Wort. Yet, only for St John's Wort (Hypericum perforatum) does a substantial body of evidence exist. It has recently been reviewed (37,38) in English. The meta-analysis by Linde et al (38) identified 23 RCTs involving a total of 1757 outpatients suffering from mild to moderate depression. Fifteen of these trials were placebo controlled, and 8 compared H perforatum with

EXERCISE
Many categories of physical exercise exist, eg, leisure-time and work-related physical activity or single bout and

AROMATHERAPY
Aromatherapists (normally NMQTs) use a combination of gentle massage techniques and essential oils from

HOMEOPATHY
Homeopathy is based on the "like cures like" principle that suggests that a remedy (often, but not always, plant based), which causes certain symptoms in a healthy individual, can be used as a treatment for

HYPNOTHERAPY
Hypnotherapy is a state of focused attention or altered consciousness. All current theories of hypnosis are provisional and incomplete. (69) Hypnotherapy cannot cure disease, but can be a useful adjunct to

MASSAGE THERAPY
There are several different forms and traditions of massage therapy. (72) In the context of this article, massage uses typically a gentle manual stroking technique over the body (usually the back). This has a

RELAXATION THERAPY
Relaxation therapy is an umbrella term for several techniques primarily aimed at decreasing physical and