Two-year follow-up of agoraphobics after exposure and imipramine
- 1 March 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in The British Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 144 (3) , 276-281
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.144.3.276
Abstract
Agoraphobic outpatients (45) were randomly assigned to treatment with imipramine or placebo, and also to brief therapist-aided exposure or relaxation. All patients did systematic self-exposure homework and recorded this in a diary. Of these patients, 40 were followed up 2 yr later with self-ratings and ratings by interviewers blind to their treatment conditions. Of the patients, .apprx. 2/3 remained improved or much improved in their phobias, with no significant difference between any of the 4 treatment conditions. Spontaneous panics also remained improved. The absence of an imipramine effect may reflect the lack of initial dysphoria (anxiety-depression) in this sample compared with other studies where drug effects were found. The post-treatment superiority (evident at wk 28) of patients who had therapist-aided exposure was no longer present at the 2 yr follow-up; the others had caught up, presumably because of their self-exposure homework.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Maintenence of improvement in agoraphobic patients treated by behavioural methods—a four-year follow-upBehaviour Research and Therapy, 1980