Group Therapy Not Always
Best Choice for Men
For depressed men seeking support for
severe grief, group therapy may not be the best choice, new research
suggests. A study of men and women in group therapy found that
men did not benefit as much as women.
"Men and women respond differently
to the group therapy format," Dr. Anthony S. Joyce of the University
of Alberta in Edmonton stated.
Men's treatment preferences seem
to differ from women's, according to Joyce.
For instance, men may prefer working
with a more "distant" therapist in a problem-solving approach,
according to Joyce. That could put them at a disadvantage in group
therapy, "where close relationships and intimate disclosure are
more common," Joyce said.
"This statement needs to be qualified,
however," Joyce said. He noted that the study looked at gender
differences in a short-term group. In longer-term groups, the
differences between men and women may disappear, he said.
"Also, most of the groups studied
had very few men - no more than 3 out of 8 to 10," Joyce said.
"So the effect reported was possibly less due to gender than to
the particular composition of the group," Joyce said. In groups
with only a few men, the women's preferred way of working may
have been the dominant orientation of the group, he said.
Despite the caveats about the study,
this is not the first time that Joyce and his colleagues have
uncovered gender differences in therapy. In a previous study,
the researchers compared men and women in individual, not group,
therapy.
"We found that men and women did
the best in the form of treatment that presumably matched their
preferences for treatment," he said. For women, that tended to
be a supportive approach, while men were more likely to prefer
an interpretive approach to therapy.
In the current study, Joyce and
his colleagues evaluated the effectiveness of group therapy in
people with major depression who also had a condition called complicated
grief. People with complicated grief experience grief symptoms
that are more extreme and long lasting than usual.
The 47 participants in the study
were enrolled in group therapy that met for 90 minutes once a
week for 12 weeks.
Some of the groups were supportive
in nature, meaning that they were aimed at helping group members
adapt to their life situations. Other groups used interpretive
therapy aimed at enhancing patients' insights about their problems.
Overall, depression, anxiety and
other symptoms improved more in women than in men, Joyce and his
colleagues report in the summer issue of the journal Psychotherapy
Research. In fact, men experienced virtually no change at all
in several symptoms.
The study also showed that men
were not as committed to their group therapy as women. In addition,
women felt that men were less compatible than the women in the
group. This may have "partially mediated" the gender difference
in response to group therapy, Joyce's team believes.
SOURCE: Psychotherapy Research,
Summer 2004.
Reference
Source 89
Aug 11, 2004
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