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Morningness-eveningness scores predict outcomes differentially for depressed patients attending morning vs. afternoon day treatment streams
Morningness-eveningness scores relate differently to outcomes for depressed patients in morning versus afternoon treatment sessions
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Abstract
In a sample of 203 patients, the interaction between treatment stream and chronotype significantly predicted changes in depression and quality of life scores.
- Definite evening chronotypes responded better to treatment in the morning stream compared to morning chronotypes.
- Conversely, definite evening chronotypes showed poorer responses in the afternoon stream relative to moderate evening or neutral chronotypes.
- A significant positive correlation was found in the morning stream between changes in chronotype scores and reductions in depression scores after four weeks of treatment.
- These findings suggest that evening chronotypes may benefit more from morning treatments, while more research is needed to confirm these results.
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