Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
: 20 | 50 | 100
1 - 20 de 26
2.
J Anxiety Disord ; 98: 102741, 2023 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37348261

OBJECTIVE: To examine the impact of youth- and caregiver-reported pretreatment worries about treatment (i.e., concerns about the effect of, perceptions of, or aspects involved in treatment) before cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety on (1) clinician-rated therapeutic process factors (i.e., client engagement, client-therapist alliance, content mastery, and homework completion) and symptom change (i.e., improvement, anxiety severity) assessed throughout treatment and (2) independent evaluator-rated posttreatment outcomes (i.e., response, remission, and functional impairment). METHODS: Participants were 128 youth, aged 7-17 years, who sought treatment for a principal anxiety disorder, and their primary caregiver. Multilevel models were estimated to examine the relationship between worries about treatment and the set of therapeutic factors. Regression models examined the relationship between worries about treatment and posttreatment outcomes. RESULTS: Results indicated that greater youth-reported worries about treatment flattened/lessened improvement trajectories throughout treatment and had a positive association with higher anxiety severity and lower content mastery. Greater caregiver-reported worries about treatment were associated with greater homework completion, client engagement, and content mastery throughout treatment. Youth- and caregiver-reports of worries about treatment did not impact independent evaluator-rated posttreatment outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Findings support the notion that worries about treatment do not prevent youth from achieving favorable posttreatment outcomes, but do impact various therapeutic factors differentially across youth and caregiver report (e.g., content mastery, client engagement, and homework completion). The value of addressing worries about treatment at the start of therapy is discussed.


Caregivers , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Humans , Adolescent , Treatment Outcome , Anxiety/therapy , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods
3.
J Anxiety Disord ; 98: 102742, 2023 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37343420

Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is an efficacious therapy for youth anxiety disorders. Caregivers are key stakeholders in youth therapy, and their feedback on treatment can help to inform intervention personalization. This mixed-methods study applied a systematic inductive thematic analysis to identify themes among most- and least-liked CBT features reported by caregivers using open-ended responses on the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8). The sample included 139 caregivers of youth ages 7-17 (M = 12.21, SD = 3.05; 59% female; 79.1% Caucasian, 5.8% Black, 2.9% Asian, 2.2% Hispanic, 7.9% Multiracial, 2.2% Other) with principal anxiety diagnoses who completed 16-sessions of CBT. CSQ-8 quantitative satisfaction scores (M = 29.18, SD = 3.30; range: 16-32) and survey-based treatment response rates (responders n = 93, 67%) were high. Most-liked treatment features included: coping skills (i.e., exposure, understanding/identifying anxiety, rewards, homework), therapist factors (interpersonal style/skill, relationship, accessibility), caregiver involvement, one-on-one time with a therapist, structure, consistency, and personally tailored treatment. Least-liked treatment features included: questionnaires, logistical barriers, telehealth, need for more sessions, non-anxiety concerns not addressed, insufficient caregiver involvement, and aspects of exposure tasks. Proportional frequencies of most- and least-liked themes differed by treatment responder status (e.g., responders cited exposure and homework as most-liked more frequently).


Caregivers , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Humans , Female , Adolescent , Male , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Anxiety/therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Patient Satisfaction
4.
J Autism Dev Disord ; 53(12): 4711-4718, 2023 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36129626

Versions of cognitive behavioral therapy (Coping Cat, CC; Behavioral Interventions for Anxiety in Children with Autism, BIACA) have shown efficacy in treating anxiety among youth with autism spectrum disorder. Measures of efficacy have been primarily nomothetic symptom severity assessments. The current study examined idiographic coping outcomes in the Treatment of Anxiety in Autism Spectrum Disorder study (N = 167). Longitudinal changes in coping with situations individualized to youth fears (Coping Questionnaire) were examined across CC, BIACA and treatment as usual (TAU) in a series of multilevel models. CC and BIACA produced significantly greater improvements than TAU in caregiver-reported coping. Youth report did not reflect significant differences. Results show the efficacy of CC and BIACA in improving idiographic caregiver-, but not youth-, reported youth coping.


Autism Spectrum Disorder , Autistic Disorder , Child , Humans , Adolescent , Autism Spectrum Disorder/therapy , Autism Spectrum Disorder/psychology , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Anxiety/therapy , Anxiety/psychology , Autistic Disorder/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological
5.
Child Youth Serv ; 43(1): 28-52, 2022.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35814495

Although schools are one of the largest providers of behavioral health services for youth, many barriers exist to the implementation of evidence-based interventions in schools. This study used the Stages of Implementation Completion (SIC) to examine school-based implementation outcomes for a computer-assisted cognitive behavioral therapy intervention for anxious youth. Organizational factors and predictors of program startup also were examined. Results indicated that the SIC detected implementation variability in schools and suggested that spending more time completing pre-implementation activities may better prepare schools for active implementation of program delivery. Furthermore, proficiency emerged as a potentially important organizational factor to examine in future school-based implementation research.

6.
School Ment Health ; 13(2): 347-361, 2021 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34178162

Mental health treatment in schools has the potential to improve youth treatment access. However, school-specific barriers can make implementing evidence-based interventions difficult. Task-shifting (i.e., training lay staff to implement interventions) and computer-assisted interventions may mitigate these barriers. This paper reports on a qualitative examination of facilitators and barriers of a school-based implementation of a computer-assisted intervention for anxious youth (Camp Cope-A-Lot; CCAL). Participants (N = 45) included school staff in first through fourth grades. Providers attended a training in CCAL and received weekly, hour-long group consultation calls for three months. In the second year, the sustainability of CCAL use was assessed. Qualitative interviews were conducted after the first year (initial implementation) and second year (sustainability). Interviews were analyzed using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research domains to classify themes. Although participants reported that CCAL included useful skills, they expressed concerns about recommended session length (45 minutes) and frequency (weekly). Time burden of consultation calls was also a barrier. School staff facilitated implementation by enabling flexible scheduling for youth to be able to participate in the CCAL program. However, the sustainability of the program was limited due to competing school/time demands. Results suggest that even with computer assisted programs, there is a need to tailor interventions and implementation efforts to account for the time restrictions experienced by school-based service providers. Optimal fit between the intervention and specific school is important to maintain the potential benefits of computer-assisted treatments delivered by lay service providers in schools.

7.
J Anxiety Disord ; 80: 102402, 2021 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33894552

Few consistent predictors of differential cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) outcome for anxious youth have been identified, although emerging literature points to youth reward responsiveness as a potential predictor. In a sample of youth ages 7-17 with a primary anxiety disorder (N = 136; Mage = 12.18 years, SDage = 3.12; 70 females; Caucasian n = 108, Black n = 12, Asian n = 4, Hispanic n = 5, other n = 7), the current study examined whether youth reward responsiveness assessed via the Behavioral Inhibition and Behavioral Activation System Scales for children, reward responsiveness subscale, predicted post-treatment (a) anxiety symptom severity, (b) depressive symptom severity, (c) functioning, (d) responder status and (e) number of homework/exposure tasks completed following 16-weeks of CBT, controlling for pre-treatment age, sex, anxiety/depressive symptom severity, and functioning. Moderation analyses examined whether relationships differed by age. Increased reward responsiveness was associated with lower anxiety and depressive symptom severity, higher functioning, and increased likelihood of being a responder, but not homework or exposure completion. Moderation analyses showed that younger, but not older, youth who were more reward responsive completed more exposures. Findings indicate that increased reward responsiveness is a predictor of better CBT outcomes for anxious youth, particularly functional outcomes, and that reward responsiveness may play a different role in exposure completion across development.


Anxiety Disorders , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Adolescent , Anxiety/therapy , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Reward , Self Report , Treatment Outcome
9.
J Consult Clin Psychol ; 89(2): 126-133, 2021 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33705168

OBJECTIVE: This article examined associations between change in youth and family characteristics during youth anxiety treatment and long-term anxiety severity and overall functioning. METHOD: Participants (N = 488; age 7-17 years; 45% male; 82% white) were randomized to 12 weeks of cognitive behavioral therapy (Coping Cat), medication (sertraline), their combination, or pill placebo in the Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study (CAMS). A subset participated in the naturalistic follow-up Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Extended Long-term Study (CAMELS; n = 319; 3.70-11.83 years post-treatment). The current secondary analyses examined how change in anxiety severity (Child Global Impression-Severity), overall functioning (Children's Global Assessment Scale), caregiver psychopathology (Brief Symptom Inventory), caregiver strain (Family Burden Assessment Scale), and family dysfunction (Brief Family Assessment Measure) during CAMS was associated with anxiety severity and overall functioning years later (M = 7.72 years). CAMS procedures were registered on clinialtrials.gov. RESULTS: Improvements in factors related to functioning (i.e., overall functioning, family dysfunction, caregiver strain) were associated with improvements in anxiety severity in CAMELS (|ßys| ≥ .04, ps ≤ .04). Improvements in factors related to psychopathology (i.e., anxiety severity, caregiver psychopathology) were associated with improvements in overall functioning in CAMELS (|ßys| ≥ .23, ps ≤ .04). It was changes in each of the variables examined (rather than baseline values) that predicted anxiety severity and overall functioning. CONCLUSIONS: Both youth and family factors play a significant role in long-term treatment outcomes. Therapists would be wise to monitor how these factors change throughout treatment. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).


Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Sertraline/therapeutic use , Adaptation, Psychological/physiology , Adolescent , Anxiety Disorders/drug therapy , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Caregivers , Child , Combined Modality Therapy , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Treatment Outcome
10.
J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry ; 60(7): 902-912.e5, 2021 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32950650

OBJECTIVE: Pediatric anxiety disorders can have a chronic course and are considered gateway disorders to adult psychopathology, but no consistent predictors of long-term outcome have been identified. A single latent symptom dimension that reflects features shared by all mental health disorders, the p factor, is thought to reflect mechanisms that cut across mental disorders. Whether p predicts outcome in youth with psychiatric disorders has not been examined. We tested whether the p factor predicted long-term psychiatric and functional outcomes in a large, naturalistically followed-up cohort of anxiety-disordered youth. METHOD: Children and adolescents enrolled in a randomized controlled treatment trial of pediatric anxiety were followed-up on average 6 years posttreatment and then annually for 4 years. Structural equation modeling was used to estimate p at baseline. Both p and previously established predictors were modeled as predictors of long-term outcome. RESULTS: Higher levels of p at baseline were related to more mental health disorders, poorer functioning, and greater impairment across all measures at all follow-up time points. p Predicted outcome above and beyond previously identified predictors, including diagnostic comorbidity at baseline. Post hoc analyses showed that p predicted long-term anxiety outcome, but not acute treatment outcome, suggesting that p may be uniquely associated with long-term outcome. CONCLUSION: Children and adolescents with anxiety disorders who present with a liability toward broad mental health problems may be at a higher risk for poor long-term outcome across mental health and functional domains. Efforts to assess and to address this broad liability may enhance long-term outcome.


Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Anxiety , Anxiety Disorders , Child , Comorbidity , Humans , Treatment Outcome
11.
Res Child Adolesc Psychopathol ; 49(1): 5-17, 2021 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32737734

Demographic factors may be associated with youth psychopathology due to social-contextual factors that may also pose barriers to intervention. Further, in line with intersectionality theory, youth with multiple non-dominant identities may be most likely to experience psychopathology and face barriers to care. This study examined rates of parent-reported psychopathology and mental health treatment utilization as a function of several demographic characteristics (in isolation and in concert) in a population-based, demographically diverse sample of 11,875 9- to 10-year-old youth. Results indicated most consistently that lower SES was associated with greater rates of psychopathology and greater likelihood of treatment utilization; that Asian American youth (relative to all other racial groups) and Hispanic/Latinx (relative to non-Hispanic/Latinx) youth were less likely to have a history of psychopathology or to have utilized treatment; and that male youth had greater rates of lifetime Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD) and Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) and were more likely to have utilized treatment. There was more modest support for interactive effects between demographic factors on psychopathology, which are discussed. The present study provides some support for differential rates of parent-reported psychopathology and treatment utilization as a function of demographic identities in youth. Potential explanations for these differences (e.g., cultural differences in symptom presentation; underreporting of symptoms) are discussed.


Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder , Psychopathology , Adolescent , Child , Demography , Hispanic or Latino , Humans , Male
12.
Child Psychiatry Hum Dev ; 52(1): 41-48, 2021 02.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32253545

The current study explored whether patient characteristics predicted patterns of antidepressant use (i.e., never used, single episode of use, or two or more episodes) in a naturalistic follow-up. Participants in the child/adolescent multimodal (CAMS) extended long-term study. (n = 318) indicated medication use over the course of eight follow-up visits, 3-12 years after receiving treatment in CAMS. 40.6% of participants reported never using an antidepressant during follow-up, 41.4% reported a single episode of antidepressant use, and 18.0% reported multiple episodes of antidepressant use. Greater baseline anxiety severity marginally predicted a single episode of antidepressant use; baseline depression severity predicted multiple episodes of use. Reasons for discontinuing antidepressants included perceived ineffectiveness (31.8%), side effects (25.5%), and improvement in symptoms (18.5%). Exploratory analyses examined predictors of medication use. Findings suggest that antidepressant use is common among anxious youth, as is discontinuation of antidepressant use. Clinical implications and future directions are discussed.


Antidepressive Agents/therapeutic use , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Anxiety/therapy , Depressive Disorder/drug therapy , Adolescent , Adult , Anxiety/complications , Anxiety/psychology , Anxiety Disorders/complications , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Child , Depressive Disorder/complications , Depressive Disorder/psychology , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Male , Young Adult
13.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol ; 50(4): 450-463, 2021.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33140992

Objective: To improve outcomes and create more personalized interventions, the field has sought to identify moderators of treatment response (variables that specify which treatments work for whom and under what conditions).Method: The current review examines moderators of youth anxiety treatments.Results: The majority of studies to date have examined variables of convenience, including demographics (age, sex, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status), pretreatment youth clinical characteristics (anxiety severity, principal diagnosis, comorbidity) and pretreatment parent variables (parent psychopathology, parenting). Findings indicate few consistent moderators.Conclusions: Future directions are discussed, including (a) group to individual generalizability, (b) power considerations, and (c) updates to study design and measure selection.


Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Anxiety/therapy , Adolescent , Child , Humans , Parenting , Parents/psychology , Treatment Outcome
14.
J Anxiety Disord ; 76: 102308, 2020 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32992268

BACKGROUND: Although exposure is a key evidence-based intervention for anxiety, it is infrequently used in clinical settings. This study employed a novel training strategy, experiential learning, to improve exposure implementation. This study aimed to assess the feasibility and acceptability of experiential training and preliminary training effectiveness. METHODS: Participants were 28 therapists who were randomized to (a) training-as-usual or (b) experiential training (training-as-usual plus a one-session treatment for fear of spiders). Workshops lasted one day and were followed by three months of weekly consultation. RESULTS: Experiential training was viewed as feasible and acceptable. Participants, including those who were fearful of spiders, had a positive response to the training and reported it to be useful. There was a significant increase in the number of exposures used by therapists receiving experiential training compared to training-as-usual at 1-month follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: A one-day training resulted in significant improvements in knowledge, attitudes toward exposure, and self-efficacy in using exposure. Preliminary findings suggest that experiential training resulted in greater use of exposure post-training compared to training-as-usual. Results provide evidence for the feasibility and acceptability of experiential training as a strategy to increase the use of evidence-based interventions.


Implosive Therapy , Problem-Based Learning , Anxiety , Anxiety Disorders , Feasibility Studies , Humans
15.
J Cogn Psychother ; 34(1): 4-20, 2020 01 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32701473

The Coping Cat protocol has shown both efficacy and effectiveness in the treatment of youth anxiety across numerous randomized controlled trials (RCTs), leading to its designation as an empirically supported treatment. The treatment is completed in two phases. In the first phase, children are taught a series of coping skills outlined using the FEAR plan acronym. The FEAR plan is then practiced in exposure tasks during the second phase of treatment. To illustrate implementation of both phases, and highlight core treatment components (i.e., exposure, flexibility within fidelity), a case description is presented. Directions for future research are discussed.


Adaptation, Psychological , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Implosive Therapy/methods , Adolescent , Child , Clinical Protocols , Humans , Male
16.
Curr Psychiatry Rep ; 22(9): 49, 2020 07 14.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32666277

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: After reviewing predictors of differential outcomes of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for pediatric anxiety, we identify and discuss recent evidence for the role of (a) intolerance of uncertainty (IU) and (b) parental accommodation as meaningful targets for personalized intervention. RECENT FINDINGS: Few studies to date have identified promising, theory-driven predictors of differential CBT outcomes. Recent findings suggest that increased IU and high levels of parental accommodation are associated with a poorer response to CBT. Several adaptations of CBT and new interventions targeting either IU or parental accommodation have been developed and found to be efficacious in preliminary studies. IU and parental accommodation are promising constructs for personalizing intervention, both in the identification of who will respond to treatment and in the development of targeted intervention. We recommend that future work test if individuals high in IU and/or parental accommodation will respond more optimally to treatments that specifically target these constructs. The results of this future work may help to move the field closer to personalized intervention.


Anxiety Disorders , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Adolescent , Anxiety , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Child , Humans , Parents , Uncertainty
17.
Child Psychiatry Hum Dev ; 51(3): 377-389, 2020 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31907734

Parental accommodation refers to ways in which caregivers modify their behavior to decrease child distress in the short-term. Accommodation is prevalent among anxious youth and related to decreased treatment and functional outcomes. Although separation anxiety disorder (SAD) is associated with increased accommodation, SAD is not a predictor of treatment response, suggesting that a diagnosis of SAD alone may not be enough to clarify the relationship between accommodation and separation anxiety symptoms within a clinical context. Participants were youth with a primary anxiety disorder (N = 186; aged 7-17) enrolled in an outpatient anxiety clinic. Latent class analysis was used to extract profiles from parent-reported SAD symptoms using the Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule for DSM-IV/5. Profiles were compared on pre-treatment accommodation. Low, moderate, and interfering SAD classes emerged. Interfering SAD was associated with high accommodation. Results help to clarify the association between SAD and accommodation and has implications for personalized intervention.


Anxiety, Separation/physiopathology , Maternal Behavior , Parent-Child Relations , Paternal Behavior , Adolescent , Adult , Anxiety, Separation/nursing , Child , Female , Humans , Male
18.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol ; 49(5): 626-638, 2020.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31039048

Latent profile analysis (LPA) was used to derive homogeneous subgroups within the Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study sample (N = 488; 7-17 years, M = 10.69, SD = 2.80) and examine whether class membership predicted or moderated treatment response. Subgroups were identified on baseline multi-informant measures of variables most consistently associated with outcome (youth anxiety/diagnosis, impairment, family psychopathology/functioning). Subgroup membership was examined as a predictor/moderator of outcome across the four treatment conditions (CBT, Sertraline, CBT+Sertraline, pill placebo) at posttreatment (12 weeks) and open-extension follow-up (24 weeks). Four subgroups emerged: mild symptoms/impairment, moderate symptoms/impairment, moderate symptoms/impairment with family dysfunction/parental psychopathology, and severe symptoms/impairment. There were significant between-class differences on socioeconomic status (SES; lower reported SES in the moderate with family dysfunction/parental psychopathology class compared to the mild and moderate class) and age (older age in the severe symptoms class compared to the other three classes). Youth in the mild symptoms/impairment class showed lower posttreatment anxiety across conditions but reported significantly lower symptom severity at baseline. Controlling for demographic differences, response to treatment type did not differ across classes. Analyses indicate that elevated family dysfunction/parental psychopathology clusters primarily within one subgroup of anxious youth rather than mapping onto symptom severity, highlighting the utility of LPA for clarifying within-person combinations of predictor/moderator variables. Implications for development of interventions targeting class-relevant variables are discussed.


Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Adolescent , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Child , Female , Humans , Male
19.
J Anxiety Disord ; 68: 102146, 2019 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31669785

The current study examined the association between changes in intolerance of uncertainty (IU) and treatment outcomes for anxious youth. Participants were youth ages 7 to 17 who received cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety (N = 73). Youth and their primary caregivers completed a diagnostic interview and self- and parent-report measures at pre- and post-treatment, including the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale for Children (IUS-C/P; Przeworski, 2006), the Coping Questionnaire (CQ-C/P; Kendall, 1994) and the Multidimensional Anxiety Scale for Children (MASC-C/P; March et al., 1997). Hierarchical regression analyses evaluated the role of change in IU (the IUS-C/P) in predicting changes in functional impairment, coping efficacy, and anxiety severity post-treatment, controlling for demographic variables (age and gender), and baseline levels of IU, anxiety severity, functional impairment, and coping efficacy. Results demonstrated that treatment was associated with improvements across child-, parent- and clinician-report, and decreased IU from pre- to post-treatment was associated with (a) decreased functional impairment, (b) increased coping efficacy and (c) decreased anxiety severity. The findings indicate that a greater reduction in IU over treatment is associated with better outcomes in children and adolescents with anxiety across informants, suggesting the possibility that an increased focus on IU during treatment for youth anxiety may improve treatment outcomes. Future research should assess the causality of this relationship.


Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Anxiety/psychology , Anxiety/therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Uncertainty , Adaptation, Psychological , Adolescent , Child , Female , Humans , Learning , Male , Parents/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Treatment Outcome
20.
Child Psychiatry Hum Dev ; 50(6): 1002-1010, 2019 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31152376

Expectancies for a favorable treatment outcome have been associated with actual favorable outcomes but have been understudied in youth with anxiety. The current study applied structural equation modeling in a sample of anxious youth (N = 488; 7-17 years, M = 10.69, SD = 2.80) to examine whether a multi-informant latent expectancies factor, indicated by youth, parent, and therapist reports, predicted a latent posttreatment anxiety factor, controlling for a latent pretreatment anxiety factor. Both anxiety latent factors were indicated by youth, parent, and independent evaluator (IE) reports. Analyses also examined whether treatment condition (cognitive behavioral therapy, sertraline, combination, pill placebo) moderated the association between expectancies and outcome, and whether this association differed across development. Findings indicated that informant reports loaded similarly onto the latent factors. Results also demonstrated that treatment expectancies were positively associated with outcomes, and that this relationship held across treatment type and age group. Treatment implications and future research directions are discussed.


Anticipation, Psychological/physiology , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Anxiety/therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors/pharmacology , Sertraline/pharmacology , Adolescent , Child , Combined Modality Therapy , Female , Humans , Male
...