Seasonal Affective Disorder (October)

Date of Issue: 10/01/2006 | Volume: 4 | Number: 10

Issue Links:Learning Objectives | Editorial Information

Teaser to be posted soon.

In This Issue

Article

Light Therapy for Depression: Does it Work?

Topics: Seasonal Affective Disorder

How convincing is the evidence that light therapy actually works? The pace of research on bright light therapy has accelerated over the last few years, and recently, two meta-analyses of this research have been published, one in the American Journal of Psychiatry, and the other in the web-based Cochrane Library.

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Article

Blue Light: The Cutting Edge of Light Therapy

Topics: Seasonal Affective Disorder

f you haven’t started hearing about the “benefits” of blue light therapy yet, you will soon. Blue light boosters argue that it is more effective than white light, and that it is the therapeutic ingredient of standard white light that eases seasonal depression.

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Article

Light Boxes: An Unscientific Test Drive

Topics: Seasonal Affective Disorder

Since I had never actually seen a light box in the flesh, I asked some of the larger companies to send me samples for a “review”—not for efficacy but for such qualities as convenience, asthetics, pleasantness, etc…

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Article

Seasonal Affective Disorder: Two Quick Takes

Topics: Seasonal Affective Disorder

Wellbutrin XL was approved for the prevention of Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD), based on the results three studies in which over 1,000 patients with SAD (but who were well at study entry) were randomly assigned to either Wellbutrin XL 150 to 300 mg QD or placebo. Do insurance companies pay for light boxes? Many of them do … or at least they say they do!

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Expert QA

Seasonal Affective Disorder

Topics: Seasonal Affective Disorder

Dr. Rosenthal, as the “father” of light therapy, how did you got interested in doing research on seasonal affective disorder?

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