Journal article

Clinical depression: An evidence-based integrative complementary medicine treatment model

J Sarris

Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine | InnoVision Professional Media | Published : 2011

Abstract

Background • Clinical depression has a major impact on individuals and society, often presenting the clinician with a significant challenge. Recent evidence suggests that synthetic antidepressants- although effective in the treatment of severe depressed mood-may have only a weak effect against mild-moderate forms of depression. In such cases, nonpharmaceutical options may be indicated. Furthermore, research findings suggest that select natural products are effective adjuvants when combined with synthetic antidepressants. Research concerning the treatment of depression emphasizes individual monotherapies, which is often incongruent with clinical reality. In practice, clinicians often use a va..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian National Health and Medical Research Council fellowship (NHMRC)


Funding Acknowledgements

Sincere thanks to Dr James Lake from The International Network of Integrative Mental Health (www.INIMH.org) for his erudite input into the manuscript. Dr Jerome Sarris is funded by an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council fellowship (NHMRC funding ID 628875), in a strategic partnership with The University of Melbourne and the National Institute of Complementary Medicine at Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne.