Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
903843 | Clinical Psychology Review | 2010 | 17 Pages |
Low-income women have very high rates of depression and also face a number of unique barriers that can prevent them from seeking, accepting, engaging in, or benefiting from psychotherapy treatment. Untreated depression often leads to deleterious psychological consequences for these women and their children, and may also diminish a woman's ability to improve her economic circumstances. We reviewed the literature on psychotherapeutic interventions for depressed, low-income women, identifying a number of practical, psychological, and cultural barriers that often prevent them from engaging in psychotherapy. Next, we assessed the degree to which established intervention programs help women overcome these barriers. The data suggest that it is quite difficult to engage depressed, low-income women in psychotherapy, but that a number of standard psychotherapy approaches do show promise. However, we found that many of the currently available interventions fail to fully address the barriers that prevent this population from engaging in treatment. Moreover, the impact these interventions have on engagement and attrition rates or clinical improvements is often inadequately reported. We provide preliminary recommendations for clinicians who work with low-income women as well as suggestions for bolstering the literature base.
Research highlights► Unique barriers interfere with depression treatment among low-income women. ► Many difficulties in engaging depressed low-income women in psychotherapy. ► Practical, psychological, and cultural barriers can be removed or mitigated. ► High engagement and retention rates lead to strong clinical improvement in trials.