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SJW has the greatest evidence of herbal medicine efficacy in treating MDD. In treating anxiety, kava has the greatest evidence of efficacy. As comorbidity of MDD and anxiety commonly occurs, it is conceivable that a combination of an established antidepressant agent such as SJW and an established anxiolytic agent such as kava may effectively treat MDD presenting with comorbid anxiety. It is possible that a beneficial synergistic effect may also occur between SJW and kava, improving the treatment outcomes in MDD with comorbid anxiety, than by the individual substances alone. Determination of this is not addressed in this study due to limitations of time and resources. The determination of the strength of the SJW-kava combination will be ascertained by comparing similar trials using SJW and kava mono-therapy in addressing MDD and GAD.
The hypothesis is that a combination of SJW and kava will reduce MDD occurring with comorbid anxiety more than placebo.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Psychotic/ Bipolar illness
Current or < 6 month significant suicidal ideation
Diagnosed hepato-biliary disease/inflammation
Current or < 6 month substance abuse disorder including alcohol
Current or < 12 month use of kava, St. John's wort,
Current or < 1 month of synthetic antidepressants or benzodiazepines
Previous reaction to kava or St. John's wort
Medications that maybe pharmacokinetically altered via St. John's wort including:
Seeing a psychologist or counsellor currently or in the previous month.
Non-English speakers.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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