Depression's Cruelest Feature: Relapse
Clinical data on major depressive disorder repeats one fact. Depression isn't an illness you 'get over' — it's an illness that returns. After a first episode, roughly 50% relapse; after a second, ~70%; after a third, ~90% (Kessing 2004; DSM-5). Stopping antidepressants raises the risk further.
Toronto's Zindel Segal, Oxford's Mark Williams, and Cambridge MRC's John Teasdale began in the 1990s with one question: could group cognitive therapy maintained in recovered patients prevent relapse? They encountered Jon Kabat-Zinn's MBSR — and the result was the 2002 book Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy for Depression (2nd ed 2013), known as MBCT.
MBSR Is 'Stress,' MBCT Is 'Relapse'
MBCT borrowed the MBSR shell almost intact: 8 weeks, weekly 2.5-hour group, daily 45-minute home practice, a day-long silent retreat in week 8. Body scan, sitting meditation, mindful yoga, and breath awareness are shared.
But the target differs. Where MBSR addresses chronic pain and 'general' stress, MBCT is designed for patients currently in remission with three or more prior depressive episodes. So cognitive elements were added — Beck-derived tools like mood-thought monitoring, identifying negative automatic thoughts, and pleasure/mastery activity logs are woven into mindfulness practice.
Teasdale's Differential Activation and the 'Depressive Interlock'
MBCT rests on Teasdale's 1988 differential activation hypothesis. After a depressive episode, even a fleeting sad mood in a recovered patient can automatically reactivate the negative thought patterns from the prior episode ('I'm worthless,' 'nothing will work').
Those thoughts intensify the mood, the intensified mood pulls in more negative thoughts. Teasdale named this self-reinforcing loop the 'depressive interlock.' It is what turns a passing bad day into a full relapse.
MBCT's hypothesis: if the patient can notice the first moment a sad mood activates automatic negative thinking — and relate to those thoughts differently — the interlock never starts.
Decentering: MBCT's Cognitive Core
The key skill MBCT teaches is decentering — observing thoughts as mental events rather than facts.
Compare:
Identified with thought: 'I'm worthless.'
Decentered: 'I'm having the thought that I'm worthless.'
Identified: 'This project failed, I'm done.'
Decentered: 'The thought that the project failed, the feeling I'm done, has arisen in my mind.'
That single line breaks the automaticity of the interlock. The thought still exists — but the thought is not 'me.' Teasdale called this metacognitive awareness, and showed that higher decentering predicted lower relapse over one year (Teasdale 2002).
The 8-Week Structure
MBCT parallels MBSR with cognitive material woven through:
- Week 1: Awareness of autopilot (raisin meditation).
- Week 2: Living in our heads (body scan).
- Week 3: Breath as anchor — introduces the 3-minute breathing space.
- Week 4: Recognizing aversion to unpleasant experience.
- Week 5: Allowing — staying with difficult feelings rather than fixing.
- Week 6: Thoughts are not facts — the decentering core session.
- Week 7: Self-care and behavioral activation — deliberate scheduling of pleasure and mastery.
- Week 8: Integrating practice for life.
MBCT's signature tool is the 3-minute breathing space: at fixed daily moments or whenever a negative mood arises, (1) one minute noticing thoughts/feelings/sensations, (2) one minute on the breath, (3) one minute expanding attention to the whole body. A pocket-sized mini-practice — MBCT's 'first aid.'
Evidence: Who Benefits
Early trials came in two waves. Teasdale (2000) and Ma & Teasdale (2004, Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology) randomized recovered patients to MBCT plus usual care vs usual care for 60-week follow-up:
- Patients with ≥3 prior episodes: relapse 37% (MBCT) vs ~66% (control) — 40–50% reduction.
- Patients with ≤2 prior episodes: no difference.
The '≥3 only' pattern implies MBCT's target is the automated thought patterns of chronic recurrent depression. First-episode patients haven't yet consolidated those patterns, so MBCT's 'de-automation' is less needed.
Later, Oxford's Willem Kuyken led larger trials. Kuyken 2008 showed MBCT non-inferior to maintenance antidepressants. Kuyken 2015 Lancet (PREVENT trial, n=424) tested 'MBCT with support to taper' (MBCT-TS) against continued antidepressants — finding no difference in relapse. Patients can taper medication and switch to MBCT.
The decisive synthesis is Kuyken 2016 JAMA Psychiatry, an individual-patient-data meta-analysis (9 RCTs, 1,258 patients). MBCT reduced relapse risk by 31% vs usual care (HR 0.69, 95% CI 0.58–0.82), with effects statistically equivalent to maintenance antidepressants. Effects were larger in patients with more residual symptoms.
On this evidence, the UK NICE guideline (2009, updated 2022) recommends MBCT as a first-line option for recovered patients with ≥3 prior depressive episodes.
MBSR vs MBCT vs CBT
| Dimension | MBSR (Kabat-Zinn 1979) | MBCT (Segal·Williams·Teasdale 2002) | CBT (Beck 1967) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Target | Chronic pain, stress, general | Recovered depression, ≥3 prior episodes | Active depression/anxiety |
| Core mechanism | Mindful awareness | Decentering + interlock interruption | Restructuring automatic thoughts |
| Format | 8-week group, 2.5h/wk | 8-week group, 2h/wk, +3-min breathing space | Usually 12–20 individual sessions |
| Home practice | 45 min daily | 45 min daily | Behavioral experiments, thought records |
| Handling thoughts | Notice and let pass | Observe as events | Test and reframe |
| Relapse-prevention evidence | Indirect | Strong (Kuyken 2016; NICE first-line) | Effects persist post-treatment |
| Active-episode evidence | Adjunctive | Not indicated | Strong (first-line) |
MBCT in Korea
Korea began serious clinical adoption in the 2010s. Following Yeungnam University's Chang Hyun-gap (pioneer of Korean mindfulness research) and his 2014 Korean MBCT effectiveness study, major academic hospitals — Seoul National University Hospital and Samsung Medical Center psychiatry — now run MBCT groups for patients in remission. Kim Kyo-heon and colleagues (2017) replicated MBCT-program effects on depression and rumination in Korean worker and student samples.
The Ministry of Health and Welfare's depression clinical guidelines explicitly name mindfulness-based cognitive therapy as a non-pharmacological option for maintenance treatment of recurrent depression. Infrastructure remains thinner than in the UK; certified MBCT teachers are few (largely trained via the Oxford Mindfulness Centre or Canadian MBCT teacher programs).
Current Korean access routes: (1) referral via outpatient psychiatry; (2) academic-hospital group programs at SNUH, Samsung, Severance; (3) MBSR/MBCT certified instructors operating through the Korean Mindfulness and Meditation Association.
Conclusion: Not Instead of Medication — Preventing Return
MBCT is not a universal cure for depression. It is not appropriate for active episodes, and not proven for first-episode patients. But for the chronic recurrent patient who has recovered but fears the fall again, MBCT is — backed by two decades of RCTs and NICE guidance — the best-validated non-pharmacological relapse prevention available.
MBCT's message is simple. Sad moods come and go. But the moment a sad mood automatically pulls in 'I'm worthless,' and the moment that thought is taken as fact — the interlock begins. The capacity to notice the gap in that automaticity, and to see thoughts as events. That is all the 8 weeks teach, and it is a lifetime's practice.