Volume 36 · Number 5
MAY 2006

Targeted Treatments: Harmonic or Sequential Augmentation

By Jan Fawcett, MD

Following our April issue concerning “The Neurobiology of Psychotherapy,” this May’s issue, guest edited by Dr. Jesse Wright and Dr. Michael Hollifield, extends the topic to the application of combining various types of psychotherapy with medication across the symptom domains of depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders, and borderline disorders. The theme of different treatments targeting various symptoms emerges from these useful discussions of the role of medications and psychotherapies across these diagnostic domains.

 

Combining Pharmacotherapy & Psychotherapy
Jesse H. Wright, MD, PhD; Michael Hollifield, MD

A 28-year-old Woman and Her 58-year-old Mother With a Shared Psychotic Disorder
Nahla Mahgoub, MD; Asghar Hossain, MD, DFAPA

Psychiatry in the News

CE article The Rationale for Combining Medication and Psychotherapy
Glen O. Gabbard, MD

CE article Combining Cognitive Therapy and Medication for Mood Disorders
Edward S. Friedman, MD; Jesse H. Wright, MD, PhD; Robin B. Jarrett, PhD; Michael E. Thase, MD

CE article Integrating Therapies for Anxiety Disorders
Michael Hollifield, MD; Amanda Mackey, MD; Jonathan Davidson, MD

CE article Psychotherapy and Pharmacotherapy in the Treatment of Somatoform Disorders
Don R. Lipsitt, MD; Vladan Starcevic, MD, PhD, FRANZCP

CE article Psychodynamic Perspective on Combining Therapies
Michelle B. Riba, MD, MS; Allan Tasman, MD

Integrated Treatment for Borderline Personality Disorder
John M. Oldham, MD

 

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