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Interrelationships of symptomatic and relational distress: Improvements in interpersonal problems predict subsequent improvement in depressive symptoms during open-ended psychotherapy for adults with depression. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-06-01
Andreas Høstmælingen,Helene Amundsen Nissen-Lie,Jon Trygve Monsen,Ole André SolbakkenOBJECTIVE Depressed patients often experience interpersonal distress. Understanding how interpersonal distress and depressive symptoms are associated may have implications for understanding the etiology and maintenance of depression, as well as for treatment. In this naturalistic psychotherapy study, we explored whether change in depressive symptoms predicted subsequent change in interpersonal distress
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Exploring the matching effect: The association between preference accommodation, the working alliance, and outcome in psychotherapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-06-01
Celia Faye Jacobsen,Fredrik Falkenström,Karen-Inge Karstoft,Libby Igra,Susanne Lunn,Jan Nielsen,Line Lauritzen,Stig PoulsenOBJECTIVE This study investigated two proposed change mechanisms in preference accommodation, thought to improve psychotherapy outcomes: a direct effect of a match between clients' initial preferences and their subsequent experiences of the therapy activities, or a mediated "matching effect" operating through the working alliance. Furthermore, the study explored whether the effect of a preference-experience
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Efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapies with a trauma focus for posttraumatic stress disorder: An individual participant data meta-analysis. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-06-01
Simonne L Wright,Eirini Karyotaki,Marit Sijbrandij,Pim Cuijpers,Jonathan I Bisson,Davide Papola,Anke B Witteveen,Sudie E Back,Dana Bichescu-Burian,Liuva Capezzani,Marylene Cloitre,Grant J Devilly,Thomas Elbert,Marcelo Feijo Mello,Julian D Ford,Damion Grasso,Richard Gray,Moira Haller,Nigel Hunt,Rolf J Kleber,Julia König,Claire Kullack,Jonathan Laugharne,Rachel Liebman,Christopher William Lee,JeannetteOBJECTIVE This individual participant data meta-analysis aimed to investigate the effectiveness of cognitive behavioral therapy with a trauma focus (CBT-TF) for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Furthermore, we examined the effect of moderators on PTSD symptom severity. METHOD This study included randomized controlled trials comparing CBT-TF to an inactive or active comparison group for adults
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The effect of mindfulness interventions on couple relationship satisfaction: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-06-01
Andreas Voldstad,Ananda Zeas-Sigüenza,Anton Skolzkov,Mari Walthaug,Jesús Montero-Marín,Willem KuykenOBJECTIVE Mindfulness interventions (MIs) train nonjudgmental attention to present-moment experience and aim to improve mental health and well-being. The evidence for their effect on interpersonal relationships is promising but uncertain. This study examines the effect of MIs on couple relationship satisfaction (RS). METHOD Randomized controlled trials of MIs including RS were selected based on systematic
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Beyond total scores: Enhancing psychotherapy outcome prediction with item-level scores. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-15
Juan Segundo Pena Loray,Miriam Ina Hehlmann,Juan Martín Gomez Penedo,Henning Schöttke,Julian A RubelOBJECTIVE This study aims at improving dropout and treatment nonresponse prevention by optimizing the performance of models for their prediction through the integration of item-level data. METHOD Routine data from 1,277 patients (Mage = 36.95, SDage = 13.64; 64.77% female) treated at Osnabrück University was used to train and evaluate 20 machine-learning algorithms and five ensemble models. Measures
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Cognitive restructuring before exposure therapy or behavioral experiments? How the timing of expectancy violation and magnitude of expectancy change influence exposure therapy outcomes. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-01
Carly J Johnco,Melissa Norberg,Viviana M Wuthrich,Ronald M RapeeOBJECTIVE Inhibitory learning models emphasize the central role of threat expectancy violation during exposure therapy. However, exposure is often implemented alongside cognitive restructuring, which reduces threat expectancies before exposure, reducing the potential for expectancy violation. This study examined whether the timing of expectancy violation (before/during exposure) and magnitude of expectancy
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Building toward a text-based intervention for parents of suicidal adolescents seeking emergency department care: A pilot randomized controlled trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-01
Ewa Czyz,Inbal Nahum-Shani,Cynthia Ewell Foster,Valerie Micol,Amanda Jiang,Nadia Al-Dajani,Alejandra Arango,Maureen Walton,Victor Hong,Sheikh Iqbal Ahamed,Cheryl KingOBJECTIVE The growing demand for emergency department (ED) care for suicidal ideation and attempts in adolescents calls for effective interventions preventing post-ED recurrence of suicidal crises. Parents are tasked with implementing postdischarge suicide prevention recommendations, often with little support. To address this need, this study examined a parent-facing texting intervention targeting
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Differential effect of early response on outcomes in person-centered experiential therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy for the treatment of adult moderate or severe depression. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-01
Kerry Ardern,Scott A Baldwin,David Saxon,Ben Lorimer,Gillian E Hardy,Michael BarkhamOBJECTIVE To investigate if Sessions 1-4 Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) scores are associated with treatment outcome and if there is a differential effect between person-centered experiential therapy (PCET) and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). METHOD A secondary data analysis of a prospectively registered and ethically approved pragmatic, noninferiority randomized controlled trial comparing
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Almost 90 years of common factors: Are they still useful in research and practice? Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-05-01
Sigal Zilcha-ManoTraditionally, psychotherapy distinguishes between "common factors" and "specific mechanisms." Common factors can be defined as "unrecognized factors in any therapeutic situation-factors that may be even more important than those being purposely employed." Specific mechanisms, by contrast, are deliberately targeted by given therapeutic approaches as the primary drivers of change. This distinction is
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Equity and inclusion in prevention: Depression prevention in Black and White American youth. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-01
Hayley D Seely,Patrick PösselOBJECTIVE Depression is an ongoing public health issue impacting over 5 million American adolescents. Although prevention has been shown to be an effective strategy in reducing the incidence of depressive symptoms, depression prevention programs have been developed and tested in largely White populations. Thus, the effects of such programs in diverse groups are understudied, though research shows adapted
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Brief use of behavioral activation features predicts benefits of self-help app on depression symptoms: Secondary analysis of a selective prevention trial in young people. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-01
Emily Bralee,Mohammod Mostazir,Fiona C Warren,Alexandra Newbold,Claire Hulme,Timothy Cranston,Benjamin Aas,Holly Bear,Cristina Botella,Felix Burkhardt,Thomas Ehring,Mina Fazel,Johnny R J Fontaine,Mads Frost,Azucena Garcia-Palacios,Ellen Greimel,Christiane Hößle,Arpine Hovasapian,Veerle E I Huyghe,Nanna Iversen,Kostas Karpouzis,Johanna Löchner,Guadalupe Molinari,Reinhard Pekrun,Belinda Platt,Tabea RosenkranzOBJECTIVE To explore which cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) self-help app usage predicted depression during a selective prevention trial. METHOD A recent controlled trial (ECoWeB-PREVENT) randomized young people aged 16-22, at increased risk for depression because of elevated worry/rumination, negative appraisals, and/or rejection sensitivity but without past or current history of major depression
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A pilot randomized controlled trial of a brief intervention targeting positive valence systems function to prevent internalizing symptoms in college students. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-04-01
Yinru Long,Christian A L Bean,Lisa Venanzi,Emma Boldwyn,Anh Dao,Lindsay Dickey,Maya Jackson,Rebecca Mueller,Samantha Pegg,Mae Winglass,Vanessa Weis,Autumn KujawaOBJECTIVE Depression and anxiety are major mental health concerns for college students, and accessible, low-cost interventions are urgently needed. Although traditional treatments focus on negative emotions, there is growing support for the efficacy of positive emotion-focused interventions. We extended this prior work by developing a peer-delivered brief promoting positive emotion (BPPE) intervention
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Efficacy of counter-attitudinal advocacy and personalized feedback for heavy-drinking college students. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-13
Kate B Carey,Angelo M DiBello,Melissa R Hatch,Andrew P Weinstein,Clayton NeighborsOBJECTIVE Young adults in college engage in risky drinking that results in alcohol-related harms. Most evidence-based prevention interventions recommended for this population rely on correcting exaggerated drinking norms via personalized normative feedback (PNF). Informed by an extensive literature linking alcohol attitudes and drinking behavior, we adapted a brief counter-attitudinal advocacy (CAA)
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Response to "Considerations in selecting comparison conditions in psychotherapy trials: Recommendations for future research". Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-10
Eric Stice,Paul Rohde,Sonja Yokum,Cara Bohon,Heather ShawSeveral researchers who have evaluated Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT) wrote a commentary arguing that the group-delivered IPT treatment for eating disorders that we adapted and used in a recent trial (Stice, Rohde, et al., 2023) was less effective than the new dissonance-based eating disorder treatment (Body Project Treatment) because the group-delivered IPT did not contain all core elements, was
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Accuracy of therapists' predictions of outcome in internet-delivered cognitive behavior therapy for depression and anxiety in routine psychiatric care. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-01
Erik Forsell,Simon Mattsson,Nils Hentati Isacsson,Viktor KaldoObjective: Early identification of failing psychological treatments could be of high clinical value, but therapists themselves have been found to be bad at predicting who will benefit or not. Previous research has some methodological limitations, and therapists' predictive accuracy has never been examined in internet-delivered treatments. Method: Therapists providing internet-delivered cognitive behavior
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The more, the merrier? Establishing a dose-response relationship for the effects of cognitive control training on depressive symptomatology. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-01
Yannick Vander Zwalmen,David Demeester,Kristof Hoorelbeke,Nick Verhaeghe,Chris Baeken,Ernst H W KosterObjective: Cognitive control impairments are frequently observed after remission from depression. There is evidence to show that cognitive control training (CCT) can reduce such impairments and related risk for recurrent episodes. However, it is currently unclear how many CCT sessions are required for short- and long-term effects. Method: This randomized controlled trial investigates the dose-response
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A randomized controlled effectiveness trial of transdiagnostic treatment and measurement-based care for adolescents with emotional disorders in community clinics. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-01
Jill Ehrenreich-May,Amanda Jensen-Doss,Lauren Milgram,David Rosenfield,Ashley M Shaw,Jamie LoCurto,Monica Nanda Robinson,E B Caron,Phyllis Lee,Golda S GinsburgObjective: This article presents primary outcomes from the Community Study of Outcome Monitoring for Emotional Disorders in Teens, a two-site, randomized controlled trial comparing the effectiveness of the Unified Protocols for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders in Adolescents plus measurement-based care (UP-A), measurement-based care alone (TAU+), and treatment as usual (TAU) in community
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A randomized trial of an app-enhanced group cognitive behavioral therapy for adolescents with mood or psychotic spectrum disorders. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-03-01
Marc J Weintraub,Megan C Ichinose,Jamie L Zinberg,Anabel Salimian,Robin D Brown,Georga Morgan-Fleming,Jennifer M Gamarra,Tiffany Tran,David J MiklowitzObjectives: Evidence-based psychosocial treatments for the early stages of mood or psychotic spectrum disorders are difficult to find in public health settings, and the efficacy of these treatments is limited by inconsistent behavioral skill practice among youth between sessions. Treatments can be made more accessible and efficacious when delivered through a group format that makes use of mobile applications
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A whole-of-society approach to depression prevention during the global pandemic: Preliminary data from three large-scale trials. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-02-17
Tracy R G Gladstone,Patrick Pössel,Cheryl Lefaiver,Kristin L Berg,Kristen Kenan,Katherine R Buchholz,Iulia Mihaila,Marian L Fitzgibbon,Brianna Sheppard,Hélène A Gussin,Cathy Joyce,Huma Khan,Jason Canel,Michael Gerges,Michael Berbaum,Linda Schiffer,Kathleen R Diviak,Matthew Lowther,Rebecca T Feinstein,Amanda Knepper,Erica Plunkett,Katherine Lashway,Pia M Montenegro,Amy Kane,Yang Liu,Aubrey ThorntonOBJECTIVE Despite the prevalence of depressive disorders among youth, there is no health system model to address the prevention of these disorders. METHOD With the goal of creating effective, tolerable, and scalable interventions for the prevention of adolescent depression, we have fielded three randomized clinical trials, centered in health care delivery organizations that use a whole-of-society approach:
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Cultivating evidence-based clinical reasoning and action in youth mental health care: The Reaching Families multisite randomized trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-02-01
Bruce F Chorpita,Kimberly D Becker,Alayna L Park,Davielle Lakind,Karen Guan,Maya M Boustani,Meredith R Boyd,Wendy Chu,Eleanor G Wu,Kendra S KnudsenOBJECTIVE Despite decades of policy emphasizing the role of evidence in guiding services, few studies have sought to improve the degree to which evidence is used in supervision and treatment. This study reports supervisor and therapist outcomes from the Reaching Families multisite cluster-randomized controlled trial, which tested the effects of a coordinated knowledge system (CKS) against practice
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Association of machine-learning-rated supportive counseling skills with psychotherapy outcome. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-02-01
Xinyao Zhang,Simon B Goldberg,Scott A Baldwin,Michael J Tanana,Lauren M Weitzman,Shrikanth S Narayanan,David C Atkins,Zac E ImelOBJECTIVE This study applied a machine-learning-based skill assessment system to investigate the association between supportive counseling skills (empathy, open questions, and reflections) and treatment outcomes. We hypothesized that higher empathy and higher use of open questions and reflections would be associated with greater symptom reduction. METHOD We used a data set with 2,974 sessions, 610
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Effects of a mobile mindfulness smartphone app on posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms and alcohol use problems for veterans: A pilot randomized controlled trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-02-01
Jordan P Davis,Eric R Pedersen,Brian Borsari,Sarah Bowen,Jason E Owen,Angeles Sedano,Denise D Tran,Shaddy Saba,Reagan E Fitzke,Joannalyn Delacruz,Liv CanningOBJECTIVE Veterans returning from deployment have high rates of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and co-occurring alcohol use disorder (AUD). Current treatments for PTSD and AUD report high dropout rates, and many veterans report alcohol misuse to cope with symptoms of PTSD. The present study is a pilot randomized controlled trial in which veterans (N = 201) were randomized to receive a mobile
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Efficacy of facilitative interpersonal and relational skills training for teletherapy: A randomized controlled trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-01-06
Tao Lin,Timothy Anderson,Eva Antebi-Lerman,Jordan Bate,Katie Aafjes-van DoornOBJECTIVE Therapists report a lack of confidence and competence in teletherapy compared to in-person therapy. Training focusing on teletherapy skills is scarce. This study reports on (a) the development of a training workshop for facilitative interpersonal skills (FIS) in teletherapy (tele-FIRST) and (b) a randomized controlled trial assessing the efficacy of tele-FIRST. Tele-FIRST is a 2-hr online
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Evaluating hypothetical prevention strategies for internalizing symptoms in the general population and at-risk children. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-01-06
Lorenza Dall'Aglio,Jeremy A Labrecque,Isabel Schuurmans,Yingzhe Zhang,Nicole Creasey,Marina Wilson,Chris J Kennedy,Ryan L Muetzel,Jordan W Smoller,Henning Tiemeier,Karmel W ChoiOBJECTIVE Specific modifiable factors (e.g., screen time [ST], sleep duration, physical activity, or social connections) are targets for reducing depression risk in adults. However, research in adolescents lacks causal inference implementations, as prevention trials are costly and often prohibitive. Emulating randomized trials with observational data enables inference regarding hypothetical interventions
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Sudden gains in the treatment of children and adolescents with prolonged grief. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-01-01
Franziska Lechner-Meichsner,Mariken Spuij,Paul A BoelenOBJECTIVE Sudden gains describe large and stable reductions in symptoms between two consecutive treatment sessions and have not yet been investigated in prolonged grief disorder (PGD), a new disorder in the 11th edition of the International Classification of Diseases and text revision of the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders characterized by separation distress
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Employing survival analysis of administrative claims to identify prospective predictors of evidence-based practice sustainment versus provider turnover. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-01-01
Lauren Brookman-Frazee,Teresa Lind,Mojdeh Motamedi,Joyce H L Lui,Morgan Crawley,Kenny Le,Anna S LauOBJECTIVE This study described therapists' delivery of six child mental health evidence-based practices (EBPs) over 33 months during the sustainment phase of a system-driven implementation aimed at improving access to EBPs in community settings. METHOD Seven hundred seventy-seven therapists and 162 program leaders delivering at least one of six EBPs of interest completed surveys, and these data were
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Mediators of a randomized controlled trial of a preventive intervention for youth of parents with depressive disorders. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-01-01
Abagail E Ciriegio,Abigail E Pine,David A Cole,Laura G McKee,Rex Forehand,Bruce E CompasOBJECTIVE The present study assessed two theory-driven mediators of the effects of a family group cognitive-behavioral (FGCB) preventive intervention for youth of parents with a history of major depressive disorder (MDD) or dysthymia on long-term youth psychopathology symptoms and diagnoses. METHOD Sample included 180 parents (Mage = 41.9, 89% female, 82% White, non-Hispanic) and one of their children/adolescents
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In search of lost time: Discrete- versus continuous-time models of working alliance and symptom severity. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2025-01-01
Robin Anno Wester,Tobias Koch,Fabian Münch,Charles Driver,Wolfgang Lutz,Julian RubelOBJECTIVE The therapeutic alliance is one of the most stable predictors of symptom burden over the course of therapy. So far, this effect has only been examined on the basis of sessions. Continuous-time models (CTM) allow this relationship to be modeled as a continuous process in which the actual time interval between measurements is considered. The aim of the present study was to compare the fit of
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Effectiveness of school-based depression prevention interventions: An overview of systematic reviews with meta-analyses on depression outcomes. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-30
Sean Grant,Maria Schweer-Collins,Elizabeth Day,Shaina D Trevino,Katarzyna Steinka-Fry,Emily E Tanner-SmithOBJECTIVE This overview aims to summarize systematic reviews with meta-analyses estimating the effects of school-based depression prevention interventions on depression outcomes. METHOD We conducted electronic searches (Australian Education Index, Google Scholar, ProQuest Dissertations and Theses A&I, Pubmed, Social Science Premium Collection), hand-searched key journals, and conducted backward and
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A theoretically based experimental manipulation of the processing of sudden gains: Considering reasons, meaning, and opportunities to leverage the gain. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-30
Jonathan G Shalom,Asher Y Strauss,Jonathan D Huppert,Gerhard Andersson,Idan M AderkaOBJECTIVE Sudden gains in psychotherapy have been found to predict outcome, but the conditions under which this occurs remain understudied. In the present study, we experimentally examined the effects of processing sudden gains on treatment outcome. METHOD As part of a large randomized controlled trial of internet-delivered cognitive behavior therapy for social anxiety disorder (n = 182), we experimentally
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Effects on family functioning and the home environment of a family-based preventive intervention for children of parents with severe mental illness: A randomized controlled trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-12
Ida Christine Tholstrup Gjøde,Anne Dorothee Müller,Carsten Hjorthøj,Nicoline Hemager,Sidsel Ingversen,Mala Moszkowicz,Sofie Heidenheim Christensen,Lisbeth Juhl Mikkelsen,Signe Sofie Nielsen,Marianne Melau,Julie Forman,Merete Nordentoft,Anne Amalie Elgaard ThorupOBJECTIVE Children of parents with severe mental illness are at increased risk of mental illness throughout their lifespan due to complex gene-environment interactions. Preventive interventions supporting parents and children are warranted. Compared with usual treatment, we tested the effectiveness of a multidisciplinary family-based preventive intervention, VIA Family. METHOD We did a parallel randomized
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"Caminando y socializando con Happy Older Latinos are Active (HOLA)": Results of a randomized clinical trial to promote health and prevent depression and anxiety in older Latinos. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-02
Daniel E Jimenez,Emily J Ross,Elliott R Weinstein,David Martinez Garza,Joseph F Signorile,Doris Perdomo-Johnson,Claudia MartinezOBJECTIVE This study sought to evaluate the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of the Happy Older Latinos are Active (HOLA) health promotion intervention in a group of older Latinos who were at risk for developing major depressive disorder or generalized anxiety disorder. METHOD Sixty older Latinos age 60+ with subthreshold depression or anxiety were randomized to receive either HOLA
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A randomized controlled trial of an online mindfulness program for adolescents at risk for internalizing problems. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-02
Judy Garber,Denise A Chavira,Emma K Adam,Michelle G Craske,Tierney McMahon,Alexander Williams,George Abitante,Isabelle Lanser,Dani S Pashtunyar,Shanting Chen,Richard ZinbargOBJECTIVE The purpose of this randomized controlled trial was to test the effects of an online, coached mindfulness intervention on momentary negative affect (mNA) for youth with high levels of trait negative affectivity. METHOD Participants were 111 youth ages 12 to 17 years old (M = 14.17, SD = 1.60). Youth self-identified as 68% female, 29% male, and 4.5% gender diverse; 54.55% identified as White;
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"Informed" consent? Ethical considerations for clinicians using therapy-matching platforms. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-01
Colette N Delawalla,Lorenzo Lorenzo-LuacesMental health care in the United States is prohibitively difficult to access. Barriers of entry include a shortage of providers, high cost of services, insufficient insurance coverage, and layers of bureaucracy. This problem of low supply and high demand created a unique environment for capitalist problem solvers to enter the therapeutic market, via "therapy-matching platforms." Several ethically related
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The power of friends in reducing sexual assault risk in college women: A preliminary test of dyad-based motivational intervention approach. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-01
Jennifer P Read,Jennifer A Livingston,Rachael J Shaw,Aria F Wiseblatt,Tiffany Jenzer,Lauren R DiPaolo,Nadine R Mastroleo,Jennifer Katz,Maria Testa,Craig R ColderOBJECTIVE Sexual assault (SA) is unfortunately common in U.S. college campuses. Friends are central to the social context of college women, and thus to the context of SA, and thus may play a key role in SA prevention. The objective of the present study was to provide a preliminary test of a novel friend-based motivational intervention (FMI) that encourages and prepares friends to work together to reduce
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The benefits of mindfulness training for momentary mindfulness and emotion regulation: A randomized controlled trial for adolescents exposed to chronic stressors. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-01
Reagan L Miller-Chagnon,Lauren B Shomaker,Mark A Prince,Jill T Krause,Addie Rzonca,Shelley A Haddock,Toni S Zimmerman,Jason M Lavender,Erica Sibinga,Rachel G Lucas-ThompsonOBJECTIVE The goal of this study was to test if a mindfulness-based intervention (MBI) compared to an active control ameliorates the impacts of life stressors on momentary mindfulness and emotion regulation difficulties among adolescents exposed to chronic stressors. METHOD Adolescents exposed to chronic stressors (N = 81, Mage = 13.75 years; 56% boys; 24% Hispanic/Latino, 57% White) were randomized
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Effects of a responsive parenting intervention on Black mothers' depressive symptoms postpartum: Secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-12-01
Olutosin Adesogan,Steven R H Beach,Sierra E Carter,Isha W Metzger,Justin A LavnerOBJECTIVE This study examined whether a responsive parenting (RP) intervention for first-time Black mothers had secondary benefits for their mental health by reducing their postpartum depressive symptoms. METHOD In total, 212 first-time Black mothers participated in the Sleep Strong African American Families randomized control trial. Mothers were randomized to the RP condition or a safety control condition
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Letter to the editor: Methodological flaws on the conduct and reporting in "Psychotherapies for the treatment of borderline personality disorder: A systematic review". Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-01
Bernardo Paim de Mattos,Eric Pascher,Ramiro Figueiredo Catelan,Igor EckertThis brief commentary critically examines the study "Psychotherapies for the Treatment of Borderline Personality Disorder: A Systematic Review" by Crotty et al. (2023) It highlights several methodological and reporting concerns that impact the study's credibility and conclusions. Key issues include the retrospective registration of the study protocol, discrepancies in authorship and protocol content
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Examining racial and ethnic differences in youth psychotherapy treatment engagement and outcomes. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-01
Kara Johansen,Indrani Saran,Evelyn Cho,John R Weisz,Maggi A PriceOBJECTIVE Research has identified racial/ethnic disparities in mental health treatment engagement, and there have been recent calls to examine effects of mental health treatment engagement on clinical outcomes among youth of color. This study aimed to examine racial/ethnic differences in (a) behavioral and attitudinal engagement, (b) treatment effectiveness, and (c) the associations between engagement
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Cognitive behavioral digital therapeutic effects on distress and quality of life in patients with cancer: National randomized controlled trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-01
Chloe J Taub,Sean R Zion,Molly Ream,Allison Ramiller,Lauren C Heathcote,Geoff Eich,Meridithe Mendelsohn,Justin Birckbichler,Patricia A Ganz,David Cella,Frank J Penedo,Michael Antoni,Dianne M ShumayOBJECTIVE Cancer-specific psychological interventions like cognitive behavioral stress management (CBSM) demonstrate distress (e.g., anxiety/depression) and quality of life (QoL) benefits. Digital formats can expand access. METHOD Patients (80.6% female; 76.5% White; 25-80 years) with Stage I-III cancer and elevated anxiety within 6 months of treatment (surgery/chemotherapy/radiation/immunotherapy)
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Response to commentary by Mattos et al. (2024). Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-11-01
Karen Crotty,Gerald Gartlehner,Meera ViswanathanReplies to comments made by Mattos et al. (see record 2025-49982-003) on the original article (see record 2024-19816-001). Mattos et al. critiqued our assessments of the certainty of evidence as being overly permissive and not adhering to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) Working Group's guidelines. GRADE has become an international standard to describe
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Telehealth-delivered depression prevention: Short-term outcomes from a school-based randomized controlled trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-31
Jami F Young,Jason D Jones,Karen T G Schwartz,Amy So,Gillian C Dysart,Rebecca M Kanine,Jane E Gillham,Robert Gallop,Molly DavisOBJECTIVE To examine short-term (i.e., postintervention) outcomes from a randomized controlled trial comparing a school-based telehealth-delivered depression prevention program, Interpersonal Psychotherapy-Adolescent Skills Training (IPT-AST), to services as usual (SAU). We expected IPT-AST would be acceptable and feasible and that IPT-AST adolescents would experience greater reductions in depression
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Safety behavior reduction for appearance concerns: A randomized controlled trial of a smartphone-based intervention. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-24
Tapan A Patel,Jesse R CougleOBJECTIVE Appearance concerns are a core feature of multiple psychiatric disorders (i.e., body dysmorphic disorder, eating disorders, and social anxiety disorders). Individuals with these concerns commonly engage in appearance-related safety behaviors (ARSB), behaviors intended to avoid, prevent, or manage the negative evaluation of one's physical appearance. The present study evaluated a brief ARSB
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Results of a randomized waitlist-controlled trial of online cognitive behavioral sex therapy and online mindfulness-based sex therapy for hypoactive sexual desire dysfunction in women. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-24
Julia Velten,Gerrit Hirschfeld,Milena Meyers,Jürgen MargrafOBJECTIVE This study aimed to investigate the efficacy of two internet-delivered psychological treatments for hypoactive sexual desire dysfunction (HSDD) in women: internet-based cognitive behavioral sex therapy (iCBST) and internet-based mindfulness-based sex therapy (iMBST). METHOD Women with HSDD were randomly assigned to one of three groups: iCBST, iMBST, or a waitlist control group. The interventions
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Individualized Assessment and Treatment Program (IATP) for alcohol use disorder: Comparison with conventional cognitive-behavioral treatment and examination of coping skills as a mediator of treatment. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-07
Mark D Litt,Howard Tennen,Ronald M KaddenOBJECTIVE This study tested a highly individualized cognitive-behavioral coping skills treatment for alcohol use disorder (AUD). Recent studies have indicated that coping skills training programs are not always effective. A possible explanation is that the training provided in these programs may not address the specific needs of the patient. The Individualized Assessment and Treatment Program (IATP)
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School-based organizational skills training for students in grades 3-5: A cluster randomized trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-01
Jenelle Nissley-Tsiopinis,Thomas J Power,Phylicia F Fleming,Katie L Tremont,Bridget Poznanski,Shannon Ryan,Jaclyn Cacia,Theresa Egan,Cristin Montalbano,Alex Holdaway,Ami Patel,Richard Gallagher,Howard Abikoff,A Russell Localio,Jennifer A MautoneOBJECTIVE Research has demonstrated the effectiveness of interventions to reduce organizational skills deficits and homework problems, including the clinic-based Organizational Skills Training (OST-C) program (Abikoff et al., 2013). In this study, OST-C was adapted for schools as a small-group (Tier 2) intervention delivered by school partners (OST-T2). METHOD The study was conducted in 22 schools
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Change processes associated with functional improvement in a web-based version of Skills Training in Affective and Interpersonal Regulation (webSTAIR) for trauma-exposed veterans. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-01
Kathryn S Macia,Eve B Carlson,Daniel M Blonigen,Jan Lindsay,Marylène CloitreOBJECTIVE In spite of the evidence that both symptom reduction and functional improvement are important for supporting recovery from trauma, psychotherapy process research has largely focused on mechanisms of symptom reduction. A better understanding of how change occurs in treatments that emphasize functional improvement rather than trauma processing is critical for optimizing effective, patient-centered
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Data-informed psychological therapy, measurement-based care, and precision mental health. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-10-01
Wolfgang Lutz,Antonia Vehlen,Brian SchwartzMeasurement-based care, that is, incorporating data-informed decision support for therapists into psychological therapy, has undergone significant advancements over the past 2 decades. Technological innovations such as computerized data assessment and feedback tools have facilitated its widespread adoption across various settings. For instance, clinicians can utilize psychometric data to personalize
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A randomized controlled trial comparing brief online self-guided interventions for loneliness. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-26
Benjamin T Kaveladze,Sara F Gastelum,Dong-Anh C Ngo,Paul Delacruz,Katherine A Cohen,Anton Käll,Gerhard Andersson,Jessica L Schleider,Stephen M SchuellerOBJECTIVE Loneliness is a global health issue, but current loneliness interventions are not scalable enough to reach many who might benefit from them. Brief online interventions could greatly expand access to evidence-based loneliness interventions. METHOD We conducted a preregistered three-armed trial (N = 908, ages 16-78) to compare three self-guided online interventions: a single-session intervention
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Emotions observed during sessions of dialectical behavior therapy predict outcome for borderline personality disorder. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-01
Stephanie Nardone,Antonio Pascual-Leone,Ueli Kramer,Florencia Cristoffanini,Loris Grandjean,Ines Culina,Shelley McMainOBJECTIVE We examined whether the emotions that clients experience within session are associated with treatment outcome in dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) for borderline personality disorder (BPD). METHOD Participants were 52 adults who met criteria for BPD and were enrolled in a 12-month DBT treatment. The Classification of Affective-Meaning States, an observer-rated measure of discrete emotions
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Disentangling between- and within-patients effects of emotion regulation on outcome in naturalistic psychotherapy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-01
Javier Fernández-Álvarez,Anna Babl,Cristina Botella,Martin Grosse Holtforth,Juan Martín Gómez PenedoOBJECTIVE The aim of this study was to disaggregate the between-patient and within-patient effects of emotion regulation (ER) on treatment outcome and explore relevant trait-like moderators of the within-patient effects. METHOD Three hundred thirty-nine patients with heterogenous clinical conditions were admitted to psychotherapy at a clinical center. During the intake evaluation, patients completed
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Reciprocal relationships between posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms and positive and negative affect in evidence-based treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-01
Peter L Rosencrans,Rosemary S W Walker,Alice E Coyne,Allison L Baier,Alexandra B Klein,Kathy Shekhtman,Alexandra R Bowling,Norah C Feeny,Lori A ZoellnerOBJECTIVE Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is associated with elevated negative affect (NA; e.g., Badour et al., 2017) and diminished positive affect (PA; Nawijn et al., 2015). PTSD treatments reduce NA (e.g., Jerud et al., 2014), but changes in PA and relationships between changes in affect and PTSD symptoms remain unclear. METHOD This study examined changes in PA and NA in adults (N = 130) with
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Does mindfulness-based cognitive therapy with tapering support reduce risk of relapse/recurrence in major depressive disorder by enhancing positive affect? A secondary analysis of the PREVENT trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-09-01
Barnaby D Dunn,Laura Warbrick,Rachel Hayes,Jesus Montero-Marin,Nigel Reed,Tim Dalgleish,Willem KuykenOBJECTIVE Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) is a viable alternative to maintenance antidepressant medication (M-ADM) to reduce risk of relapse/recurrence (RR) in recurrent depression, but its mechanism of action is not yet fully articulated. This secondary analysis of the PREVENT trial examined if MBCT with support to taper medication (MBCT-TS) reduces risk of RR in part by enhancing positive
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Negative affect variability as a potential mechanism of behavior change in alcohol use disorder treatment. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-01
Braden K Linn,Junru Zhao,Paul R Stasiewicz,Gregory E Wilding,Charles LaBarre,Kyler S Knapp,Clara M BradizzaOBJECTIVE Negative affect and affect variability figure prominently in models of addictive behaviors but are not without controversy. Negative affect variability may better capture a mechanism of behavior change in alcohol use disorder (AUD) treatment because it contains information about affect regulation, a common clinical target. The aims of this study are to examine the change in: (a) trajectory
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The role of affect dynamics as mechanisms of change in mental health interventions: Integrating applied and basic science. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-01
Eran Bar-Kalifa,Laura F Bringmann,Sigal Zilcha-ManoIn recent years, there has been growing empirical interest in examining the role of affect dynamics in mental health. However, research on affect has largely progressed independently in the basic and applied sciences, yielding significant advances in each domain but little cross-disciplinary integration. This special issue addresses this gap by showcasing some of the most promising recent developments
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Does it matter how meditation feels? An experience sampling study. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-01
Simon B Goldberg,Daniel M Bolt,Cortland J Dahl,Richard J Davidson,Matthew J HirshbergOBJECTIVE Meditation apps are the most widely used mental health apps. The precise mechanisms underlying their effects remain unclear. In particular, the degree to which affect experienced during meditation is associated with outcomes has not been established. METHOD We used the meditation app arm of a recently completed randomized controlled trial comparing a self-guided meditation app (Healthy Minds
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Outcome prediction in psychological therapy with continuous time dynamic modeling of affective states and emotion regulation. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-01
Miriam I Hehlmann,Danilo Moggia,Brian Schwartz,Charles Driver,Steffen Eberhardt,Wolfgang LutzOBJECTIVE To date, many prediction studies in psychotherapy research have used cross-sectional data to predict treatment outcome. The present study used intensive longitudinal assessments and continuous time dynamic modeling (CTDM) to investigate the temporal dynamics of affective states and emotion regulation in the early phase of therapy and their ability to predict treatment outcome. METHOD Ninety-one
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Evidence for a vicious socioemotional cycle of negative emotions and interpersonal conflict. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-08-01
Colin E Vize,Whitney R Ringwald,Lori N Scott,Thomas W Kamarck,Paul A Pilkonis,Aidan G C WrightObjective: Interpersonal and emotional functioning are closely linked and reciprocally influence one another. Contemporary integrative interpersonal theory (CIIT) offers a useful framework to conceptualize these patterns and guide interventions in cases where these patterns result in dysfunction. Stress processes offer several dynamic frameworks to guide empirical investigations using methods that
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Reducing intrusive suicidal mental images in patients with depressive symptoms through a dual-task add-on module: Results of a multicenter randomized clinical trial. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-07-18
Jaël S van Bentum,Marit Sijbrandij,Ad J F M Kerkhof,Emily A Holmes,Arnoud Arntz,Nathan Bachrach,Chloë S C Bollen,Daan Creemers,Maarten K van Dijk,Pieter Dingemanse,Monique van Haaren,Marieke Hesseling,Annemiek Huisman,Fleur L Kraanen,Yvonne Stikkelbroek,Jos Twisk,Henricus L Van,Janna Vrijsen,Remco F P de Winter,Marcus J H HuibersOBJECTIVE To examine the safety and efficacy of a brief cognitive dual-task (using eye movements) add-on module to treatment as usual (TAU) in reducing the severity and frequency of intrusive suicidal mental images and suicidal ideation. METHOD We conducted a single-blind, parallel multicenter randomized trial (No. NTR7563) among adult psychiatric outpatients (N = 91; Mage = 34.4, SD = 13.54; 68% female)
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Working alliance in exposure-based treatments of posttraumatic stress disorder related to childhood abuse. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology (IF 4.5) Pub Date : 2024-07-01
Danielle A C Oprel,Chris M Hoeboer,Maartje Schoorl,Rianne A de Kleine,Willem van der Does,Agnes van MinnenOBJECTIVES Working alliance is considered an important determinant of outcome of psychotherapy. Patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following childhood abuse (CA-PTSD) may have challenges in building interpersonal relationships, including working alliance. Phase-based treatment provides an opportunity to strengthen alliance prior to trauma-focused treatment. This study aimed to compare