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1.
Glob Adv Health Med ; 11: 2164957X221108376, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35770246

RESUMEN

Background: Valued living is the extent to which an individual's behavior is consistent with what they believe is important or good. It is unknown whether many complementary and integrative treatments and psychotherapies for posttraumatic stress disorder enhance valued living, and for whom. Objectives: Measure within- and between-group changes in valued living in Veterans who completed cognitive processing therapy (CPT) and sudarshan kriya yoga (SKY) for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD); evaluate moderators of improvement. Methods: Participants with clinically significant symptoms of PTSD were assigned to CPT, a first line, evidence-based psychotherapy for PTSD or SKY, an emerging breath-based meditation with strong preliminary empirical support in a parallel-groups randomized controlled trial at a single Veterans Affairs healthcare center. The Valuing Questionnaire subscales for progress in valued living (VQ-P) and obstruction in valued living (VQ-O) were exploratory outcome measures. Assessors were blind to treatment assignment. Results: 59 participants completed treatment (29 CPT, 30 SKY). Participants in the CPT group improved from baseline to end of treatment in both VQ-Progress (d=0.55, p=0.02) and VQ-Obstruction (d=-0.51, p=0.03), while the SKY group did not improve on either subscale (d=0.08, p=0.69; d=0.00, p=1.00). However, differences between treatments were not statistically significant (p=0.16, 0.11, respectively). Participants reporting less valued living and more depression symptoms at baseline reported greater improvements in valued living following treatment. Conclusion: CPT may have a positive effect on valued living. Individuals lower in valued living and with more depression may derive relatively more benefit.

3.
Behav Ther ; 37(2): 120-30, 2006 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16823465

RESUMEN

To evaluate whether the specific techniques of a newly developed behavioral therapy exceed the effects of its common factors (e.g., therapeutic alliance), an ideal comparison control must omit the unique ingredients of the active treatment while possessing the common factors in equal measure. Reviews of the controlled-trial psychotherapy research literature show that such systematic matching is not a common practice. Addressing this gap between theory and practice, we delineate 7 steps for designing a credible control for a recently developed behavioral therapy adapted for binge eating disorder--dialectical behavior therapy (DBT). Our detailed description of matching the common factors to the extent possible and specifically measuring these offers a useful research design template for investigators of controlled behavioral treatment trials.


Asunto(s)
Terapia Conductista/métodos , Psicoterapia de Grupo , Proyectos de Investigación , Humanos
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