Date | Event | Description |
---|---|---|
13 August 2018 | New citation required and conclusions have changed | There is very low‐certainty evidence that pharmacological interventions may prevent depression and improve mood after stroke compared to placebo. |
13 August 2018 | New search has been performed | New co‐authors: SA, KC & C‐FH New interventions included: combination psychological and pharmacological interventions versus a single intervention, and non‐invasive brain stimulation interventions and the review title has been updated accordingly. The following additional outcomes: health‐related quality of life (HRQoL), as measured on scales such as the 36‐item short form questionnaire (SF‐36, Ware 1993), proportion reporting dependence in self‐care activities of daily living (ADL) on the Modified Rankin Scale (mRS, Rankin 1957) and principal caregiver HRQoL and stress have been removed in this update. Six new trials, with 417 participants included in the review. A total of 19 trials (21 interventions), with 1771 participants, are included in the review. Data were available for 12 pharmacological trials (14 interventions) and seven psychological therapy trials. Covidence was used to collate and screen identified titles and abstracts. MH extracted additional data from previously included trials. The searches for the review were completed to 13 August 2018. |