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antidepressants, there are some pointers in that direction. The report of some differences between individuals who respond to cognitive therapy and those who respond to drug treatment and the report of an additive effect between drugs and interpersonal therapy make it reasonable to try psychological treatment in such cases when there are relevant problems for the therapists to work on. Neither form of psychological treatment has been shown convincingly to reduce the relapse rate below that in patients receiving maintenance antidepressants, but there are individual patients in whom relapse seems to be closely related to cognitive factors or interpersonal problems, and in these cases psychological treatment can be tried when other measures have failed.
MacIntyre et al. (Sat,) studied this question.