Types of Depression
At the Institute we believe that there are three broadly different types of depression:
Melancholic depression
Non-melancholic depression
Psychotic depression
each with their own features and causes.
A possible fourth type of depression is
Atypical depression.
Why is this important? We believe that, as with any illness, the person suffering from it can’t be properly treated unless the specifics of their illness are understood.
We therefore believe that people who are depressed should receive a sophisticated assessment identifying their particular type of depression and its broad causes, whether biological, psychological or other.
Treatments should be selected according to the specific type of depression experienced by an individual, and its causes.
A description of the different types of depression follows.
Melancholic depression
Melancholic depression is the classic form of biological depression. Its defining features are:
a more severe depression than is the case with non-melancholic depression
psychomotor disturbance
Melancholic depression is a relatively uncommon type of depression. It affects only 1-2 per cent of Western populations. The numbers affected are roughly the same for men and women.
Melancholic depression has a low spontaneous remission rate. It responds best to physical treatments (for example antidepressant drugs) and only minimally (at best) to non-physical treatments such as counseling or psychotherapy.
Non-melancholic depression
‘Non-melancholic depression’ essentially means that the depression is not melancholic, or, put simply, not primarily biological. Instead, it has to do with psychological causes, and is very often linked to stressful events in a person’s life, alone, or in conjunction with the individual’s personality style.
Non-melancholic depression is the most common of the three types of depression. It affects one in four women and one in six men in the Western world over their lifetime.
Non-melancholic depression can be hard to accurately diagnose because it lacks the defining characteristics of the other 2 depressive types (viz psychomotor disturbance or psychotic features). Also in contrast to the other 2 depressive types, people with non-melancholic depression can usually be cheered up to some degree.
People with non-melancholic depression experience
a depressed mood more than two weeks
social impairment (for example, difficulty in dealing with work or relationships).
In contrast to the other types of depression, non-melancholic depression has a high rate of spontaneous remission. This is because it is often linked to stressful events in a person’s life, which, when resolved, tend to see the depression also lifting.
Non-melancholic depression responds well to different sorts of treatments (such as psychotherapies, antidepressants and counselling), but the treatment selected should respect the cause (e.g. stress, personality style).
Psychotic depression
Psychotic depression is a less common type of depression than either melancholic or non-melancholic depression.
The defining features of psychotic depression are:
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