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1 identifying novel approaches to rapid-acting psychotherapeutics.
2  drug treatments and may contribute to their psychotherapeutic actions.
3  relative proportions of previously dominant psychotherapeutic agents in the stimulant and antidepres
4 wed: infant-mother attachment behaviors, the psychotherapeutic alliance, and the marital relationship
5              There is emerging evidence that psychotherapeutic and neuromodulatory interventions can
6 nstruct and highlight the need for alternate psychotherapeutic and pharmacologic strategies to treat
7 evelopmental period, we present evidence for psychotherapeutic and pharmacological interventions that
8 e drug taking and seeking, requires constant psychotherapeutic and pharmacotherapeutic interventions
9 he evidence into account, the combination of psychotherapeutic and psychopharmacological intervention
10 e found in which the intervention tested was psychotherapeutic and the study included measures of out
11                                            A psychotherapeutic approach may be needed as a routine pa
12 ther some patients may benefit more from one psychotherapeutic approach than from others.
13   The tension between the biomedical and the psychotherapeutic approaches in psychiatry needs to be e
14 tential to inform the ongoing development of psychotherapeutic approaches in the treatment of depress
15                      The study of individual psychotherapeutic approaches to the treatment of schizop
16 te and treat depression, failure to consider psychotherapeutic approaches, and prescription of inadeq
17                                          Two psychotherapeutic approaches-cognitive behavioural thera
18  the cross-cultural applicability of Western psychotherapeutic approaches.
19                  Lane et al.'s proposal that psychotherapeutic change comes about through memory reco
20 reconsolidation provides a unifying model of psychotherapeutic change given our current state of know
21 tive affect is one key mechanism of adaptive psychotherapeutic change in PTSD.
22 about what is truly essential to bring about psychotherapeutic change.
23 questions about the underlying principles of psychotherapeutic change.
24 mory reconsolidation as a main ingredient of psychotherapeutic change.
25 directive psychotherapy were included if the psychotherapeutic component was present in both experime
26 than a brief intervention or that included a psychotherapeutic component), health promotion and educa
27 id-selective antagonists may represent novel psychotherapeutic compounds for diseases manifested by p
28  fear conditioning are potential targets for psychotherapeutic drug development.
29 o explore neuroanatomical sites of action of psychotherapeutic drugs that influence behavioral respon
30                         Data from studies on psychotherapeutic, educational' and pharmacological inte
31 l in three areas: (a) theory development for psychotherapeutic effectiveness, (b) research design, an
32 vel explanations to advance understanding of psychotherapeutic effectiveness.
33 ure to achieve a more accurate assessment of psychotherapeutic effectiveness.
34 ntegrated evidence-based pharmacotherapy and psychotherapeutic elements targeting PTSD symptoms and c
35 e superintendents voiced surprisingly modern psychotherapeutic insights.
36                   Lane et al. argue that any psychotherapeutic intervention at its core acts on react
37 ent with antidepressants, and the absence of psychotherapeutic intervention predicted syndromic recur
38 es that promote normalization, peer support, psychotherapeutic intervention, and genetic counseling m
39 d clinicians providing individual and family psychotherapeutic intervention.
40 ions is likely to be more effective than are psychotherapeutic interventions alone, at least in sever
41     Yet, it is unknown whether pre-operative psychotherapeutic interventions can attenuate such effec
42 tions, could be used to guide more effective psychotherapeutic interventions for these groups.
43                                              Psychotherapeutic interventions had a greater effect tha
44 hildhood maltreatment, suggesting a role for psychotherapeutic interventions in alleviating associate
45 techniques to strengthen bodily awareness in psychotherapeutic interventions of BPD.
46        Findings from quantitative studies of psychotherapeutic interventions with primary psychologic
47 nd well-being of mothers and their children, psychotherapeutic interventions, efforts to alleviate pr
48       Pharmacological treatment coupled with psychotherapeutic interventions, such as cognitive behav
49 tistic people also do not respond to typical psychotherapeutic interventions, suggesting that autism-
50 nd treatment was not preceded by stabilizing psychotherapeutic interventions.
51 pond more poorly to both pharmacological and psychotherapeutic interventions.
52 ed with caution during reconsolidation-based psychotherapeutic interventions.
53 loping appropriate models, measurements, and psychotherapeutic interventions.
54 odel (1) only explains a small subsegment of psychotherapeutic mechanisms and (2) ignores the difficu
55 ed with the utilization of psychotherapy and psychotherapeutic medications among women with breast ca
56 th them, and those who were not dependent on psychotherapeutic medications were less likely to percei
57  problems with medical providers, 29.6% took psychotherapeutic medications, 5.6% received outpatient
58              Patients received a mean of 2.0 psychotherapeutic medications, most commonly antidepress
59                                Although some psychotherapeutic modalities appear to be acceptable and
60 ssion, recent studies of antidepressants and psychotherapeutic modalities for treatment of adolescent
61 g this gap in the literature, a novel dyadic psychotherapeutic model, Parent Child Interaction Therap
62 s in which antidepressants may be tried when psychotherapeutic options fail and depression is severe
63 domised controlled trials in which an active psychotherapeutic or pharmacological intervention had be
64 severe depression recruited at 7 psychiatric-psychotherapeutic outpatient trial sites in Germany from
65                                              Psychotherapeutic, pharmacological, or neuromodulatory t
66 ise of integrating psilocybin treatment with psychotherapeutic platforms that target psychological fl
67 ge of interest in these mushrooms due to the psychotherapeutic potential of their natural alkaloid ps
68 e rational intellect alone" often imparts in psychotherapeutic practice a compelling urgency toward a
69              However, the awkward niche that psychotherapeutic practice occupies is closer to literar
70 sted that substance P antagonists might have psychotherapeutic properties.
71 rom social anxiety and the need for adjusted psychotherapeutic protocols.
72 ucational resource and three telephone-based psychotherapeutic sessions over a 1-month period timed i
73 orative integrated care, and a non-directive psychotherapeutic stance.
74 al treatment did not produce a comprehensive psychotherapeutic system.
75 rovided longer sessions and used more formal psychotherapeutic techniques (e.g., interpretation) than
76                                              Psychotherapeutic theories assume such metacognitive ins
77  that CBT should be considered the preferred psychotherapeutic treatment for bulimia nervosa.
78 havioral therapy (CBT) is the most effective psychotherapeutic treatment for bulimia nervosa.
79                 Effective pharmacological or psychotherapeutic treatment has been shown to improve th
80 ria for resistance to pharmacological and/or psychotherapeutic treatment, as well as a potential stag
81 , addiction, meditation practice, or current psychotherapeutic treatment.
82 a life-threatening health status and ongoing psychotherapeutic treatment.
83 sychodynamic therapy and CBT, the main rival psychotherapeutic treatments (adversarial collaboration)
84  optimum combinations of pharmacological and psychotherapeutic treatments at different stages of the
85 dies support a number of pharmacological and psychotherapeutic treatments for childhood anxiety disor
86 contributes to the substantial literature on psychotherapeutic treatments for PTSD by meta-analyzing
87 heritability and with specific and effective psychotherapeutic treatments.
88 ions, but a serious limitation was that most psychotherapeutic trials included patients who were taki
89 s from the author's more than 9,000 hours of psychotherapeutic work and 500 psychotherapy consultatio