[Efficacy of psychodynamic therapies: A systematic review of the recent literature].

CONCLUSION: A systematic review about psychodynamic therapies, published in 2015 in Lancet Psychiatry, included 64 randomized controlled trials of which 37 were published after 2003. Therefore, most quality studies assessing psychodynamic therapies have been published since 2003 and have been reviewed in recent meta-analysis articles. All together, this recent literature leads to the conclusion that psychodynamic therapies are as effective as active treatments, including cognitive psychotherapies, to help patients suffering from common mental disorders (unipolar depression, anxiety disorders, eating disorders and personality disorders). Beside this overall conclusion, it appears that randomized controlled trials are not well suited for answering why psychotherapies work in some patients but not in others, and how they work in general. Other approaches are needed, including case studies. PMID: 32928529 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: L Encephale - Category: Psychiatry Tags: Encephale Source Type: research