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Telehealth therapy improved quality of life for veterans with Parkinson's and depression

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Telehealth therapy improved quality of life for veterans with Parkinson's and depression
Photo by Markus Winkler / Unsplash

Researchers studied whether a special form of talk therapy, delivered by video call, could help veterans who have both Parkinson's disease and depression. The study involved 90 veterans who received either 10 sessions of this Parkinson's-informed cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) or continued with their usual VA care. The therapy was designed to address the unique challenges of living with Parkinson's.

At the end of the treatment, veterans who received the telehealth CBT reported better physical and mental quality of life compared to those who received standard care. The researchers also found that the therapy's positive effect on physical quality of life seemed to happen, in part, by helping to reduce symptoms of depression.

It's important to know this study focused specifically on veterans with both conditions, so the results might not apply to everyone with Parkinson's. The abstract did not report on side effects or how well people tolerated the therapy. The study also only measured results right after treatment ended, so we don't know if the benefits lasted. While the results are promising for this group, more research is needed to understand the long-term effects and how it might work for other people.

What this means for you:
A small study found telehealth CBT improved quality of life for veterans with Parkinson's and depression, but longer-term results are unknown.
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