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1 for pharmacotherapy and cognitive-behavioral group therapy.
2 t find a treatment effect for trauma-focused group therapy.
3 reintegration skills training or supportive group therapy.
4 easures of social adjustment than supportive group therapy.
5 protection to impaired physicians who enter group therapy.
6 s among participants and facilitators during group therapy.
7 nitive, behavioral, brief psychodynamic, and group therapies.
8 a randomized trial of supportive-expressive group therapy, 125 women with metastatic breast cancer (
10 bo administration, or educational-supportive group therapy (an attention-placebo treatment of equal c
14 treatment methods are cognitive-behavioral, group therapy, and, when appropriate, medications such a
16 o 55.7 vs 58.8 to 55.8 with present-centered group therapy; between-group difference, 4.95; 95% CI, 1
18 2-site study comparing cognitive behavioral group therapy (CBGT) and treatment with the monoamine ox
21 to add-on therapy with cognitive-behavioral group therapy (CBT-arm), add-on therapy with ultra-brief
22 ne (FLU), comprehensive cognitive behavioral group therapy (CCBT), placebo (PBO), and the combination
24 s potential to improve group cohesion during group therapy.Clinical Trials Registration: NCT02881177,
26 verity (48.9% vs 28.1% with present-centered group therapy; difference, 20.9%; 95% CI, 2.2%-39.5%; P
27 iented social skills training and supportive group therapy for improving the social adjustment of sch
30 are modest in schizophrenia, 2) specialized group therapy for schizophrenic patients is not signific
32 cians would feel safer in sharing secrets in group therapy if more jurisdictions adopted legislation
33 14 education sessions, and 1 hour of cocaine group therapy, if appropriate, for 6 months, and 6 month
35 main finding implicates cognitive-behavioral group therapy in combination with antidepressants might
36 tly different from American Lung Association group therapy in its effect on smoking cessation, and 3)
39 n advanced breast cancer was not affected by group therapy in two large randomized controlled studies
40 therapy, named Interactive Psychoeducational Group Therapy, in reducing primary symptoms of PTSD in f
41 ase bupropion in combination with supportive group therapy may help patients with schizophrenia decre
43 ental, accepting manner; or present-centered group therapy (n = 58), an active-control condition cons
44 weeks, were randomly assigned to integrated group therapy (N=31) or group drug counseling (N=31).
45 16-week trauma-focused, cognitive-behavioral group therapy, named Interactive Psychoeducational Group
46 oring social skills training over supportive group therapy on two of the six Social Adjustment Scale
47 rolled trial compared 20 weeks of integrated group therapy or group drug counseling with 3 months of
48 idual therapy (OR, 0.27; 95% CI, 0.22-0.33), group therapy (OR, 0.19; 95% CI, 0.14-0.25), and psychos
49 y fewer days of substance use for integrated group therapy patients during treatment and follow-up.
50 treatment and follow-up, although integrated group therapy patients had more depressive and manic sym
51 chemotherapy to either 20 sessions of weekly group therapy plus three relaxation classes (n = 154) or
52 Lung Association (N=17) or 2) a specialized group therapy program for smokers with schizophrenia (N=
53 ve subjects were randomly assigned to 1) the group therapy program of the American Lung Association (
56 e of treatment suggested that trauma-focused group therapy reduced avoidance and numbing and, possibl
57 owed by 18 months of maintenance mentalizing group therapy remain better than those receiving treatme
58 tion therapy, compared with present-centered group therapy, resulted in a greater decrease in PTSD sy
60 transdermal patch (21 mg/day) and 10 weekly group therapy sessions and continued to receive their pr
62 -mg calcium) vs placebo and 21 individual or group therapy sessions vs none (blinded to researchers)
63 fective prophylaxis to the various treatment groups, therapy should be tailored to the individual bas
65 reatment may not improve all outcomes in all groups, therapies that combine progesterone with other n
66 lness training, artistic expression and EMDR group therapy, that significantly reduced PTSD-related s
67 either social skills training or supportive group therapy twice weekly for 6 months and then weekly
68 ial (N = 12), receipt of psilocybin-assisted group therapy was associated with a large pre-post decre
69 ge of social skills training over supportive group therapy was greatest when it was combined with act
70 outpatient services, individual therapy, and group therapy were calculated under different assumption
71 ndividual sessions throughout 6 months, plus group therapy when feasible, with SSRIs for patients sco
73 nd state laws relevant to confidentiality in group therapy with impaired physicians and 2) to provide
74 months (95% CI, 64.8 to 99.0 months) in the group-therapy women and 85.5 months (95% CI, 67.5 to 103
75 othesized that patients receiving integrated group therapy would have fewer days of substance use and