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1 , online platforms are being used to deliver psychotherapy.
2  group received an average of 12 sessions of psychotherapy.
3 athogenic mood effects that may be useful in psychotherapy.
4 ences is an integrative pathway to change in psychotherapy.
5 atment strategies for PTSD is exposure-based psychotherapy.
6 sal as a precipitating factor for successful psychotherapy.
7 terans, do not have access to evidence-based psychotherapy.
8 o examine rs-fcMRI predictors of response to psychotherapy.
9 loserine (DCS), enhanced the efficacy of the psychotherapy.
10 ues do not contribute much to the outcome of psychotherapy.
11 reatment as usual and clarification-oriented psychotherapy.
12  was observed between CBT and psychoanalytic psychotherapy.
13 t of combining antidepressant treatment with psychotherapy.
14 n combination with psychopharmacology and/or psychotherapy.
15 tive in the clinical domains of medicine and psychotherapy.
16 c medication, or the selection of a specific psychotherapy.
17 nts received psychotropic medication without psychotherapy.
18 sant medication, and selection of a specific psychotherapy.
19 hotic medications and less likely to undergo psychotherapy.
20 ability to engage with traumatic material in psychotherapy.
21 nce for psychological interventions, such as psychotherapy.
22 city of psychological interventions, such as psychotherapy.
23 ess the value of long-term disorder-specific psychotherapy.
24  (NPTs), such as surgery, rehabilitation, or psychotherapy.
25 lines recommend combined pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy.
26 ive/prosocial affects can facilitate diverse psychotherapies.
27 ing the development of effective, simplified psychotherapies.
28 emories and improve the efficacy of exposure psychotherapies.
29 o control conditions or other evidence-based psychotherapies.
30 t (-0.75, -1.25 to -0.26), and psychodynamic psychotherapy (-0.62, -0.93 to -0.31).
31 g outpatient mental health care, use of only psychotherapy (15.9% and 10.5% in 1998 and 2007, respect
32 kelihood of receiving antidepressants and/or psychotherapy (84.9%-89% versus 49%-62%) and had a 2.2 t
33                                         PTSD psychotherapy adaptively attenuates functional interacti
34 ehensive, emotion-focused perspective on how psychotherapy affects brain function is lacking.
35 mining the efficacy of the administration of psychotherapy after successful response to acute-phase p
36 of major depression; n = 023); most received psychotherapy alone or in combination with medications.
37 is would be sufficient to make psychodynamic psychotherapy an "empirically validated" treatment (per
38 e synergistic or antagonistic interaction of psychotherapies and drugs for treating personality disor
39 ychotherapists have developed a new model of psychotherapy and a meta-narrative theory of diverse men
40 ree of 103 comparisons between psychodynamic psychotherapy and a nondynamic comparator were of "adequ
41                                  Efficacious psychotherapy and antidepressant medications have been d
42                                Interpersonal psychotherapy and CBTgsh are significantly more effectiv
43          The authors compared psychoanalytic psychotherapy and cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) in
44                                      Dynamic psychotherapy and CT were discriminated from each other
45  groups reported higher use of any past-year psychotherapy and guideline-concordant psychotherapy com
46 oncepts in a wide range of fields, including psychotherapy and medical sociology.
47                                     Although psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy have proven efficaciou
48 s not appear to confer advantages over brief psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy in hastening recovery
49  and brain plasticity under the influence of psychotherapy and positive emotions, emotions--especiall
50 fects were observed for individual and group psychotherapy and psychoeducation.
51 eneficial effects for several interventions (psychotherapy and psychosocial supports) compared with u
52 dds ratio=0.66, 95% CI=0.48-0.90) as well as psychotherapy and psychotropic medication together (40.0
53 r some effects, particularly with individual psychotherapy and relaxation training.
54 chanism underlying the potent combination of psychotherapy and somatic stimulation in treating sympto
55  system mechanisms of a novel combination of psychotherapy and somatosensory stimulation that has rec
56 ons during emotion regulation is enhanced by psychotherapy and that the frontopolar cortex exerts dow
57 choice between antidepressant medication and psychotherapy and the choice of specific antidepressant
58 rocesses might be differentially modified by psychotherapy and the neural basis of such changes are u
59                       Clarification-oriented psychotherapy and treatment as usual did not differ.
60 ving binging and purging than psychoanalytic psychotherapy and was generally faster in alleviating ea
61  defense adaptation during long-term dynamic psychotherapy and whether such change is associated with
62 f schema therapy with clarification-oriented psychotherapy and with treatment as usual among patients
63 discussed with a focus on pharmacotherapies, psychotherapies, and combined treatments.
64 ring Dynamic Experience in Psychology, Arts, Psychotherapy, and Development (2010)].
65 care measures included medication adherence, psychotherapy, and follow-up visits.
66 ncluding pharmacological, brain stimulation, psychotherapy, and meditation.
67 antidepressant medications or evidence-based psychotherapy, and monitor depression symptoms.
68                                 Medications, psychotherapy, and other treatments are effective for ma
69  routine primary care, diagnostic screening, psychotherapy, and pharmacologic treatments, and retenti
70 arkers and mechanisms that enable successful psychotherapy, and the establishment of therapeutic alli
71 psychotherapy vs placebo, pharmacotherapy vs psychotherapy, and their combination vs either modality
72 of psychotherapy visits of persons receiving psychotherapy; and psychotherapy expenditures.
73 ent health providers need to be aware of the psychotherapy approaches recommended for teens with eati
74 PD) is a debilitating condition, but several psychotherapies are considered effective.
75                   Many pharmacotherapies and psychotherapies are effective, but there is a lot of roo
76  do not yet know what will emerge when other psychotherapies are subjected to this form of quality-ba
77 ilot studies suggest that different forms of psychotherapy are effective for NES.
78                    While antidepressants and psychotherapy are effective, only about 40% of depressed
79 andomized controlled trials of psychodynamic psychotherapy are promising but mostly show superiority
80 ical trials to further examine MDMA-assisted psychotherapy as a novel approach to treat individuals w
81               Over the same period, however, psychotherapy assumed a less prominent role in outpatien
82 reat late-life depression and make effective psychotherapy available to large numbers of depressed ol
83 erapy, that guides the plastic networks, and psychotherapy benefits from the enhanced plasticity prov
84 motional effects (eg, prosociality, empathy, psychotherapy), but surprisingly little research has bee
85 be a specific mechanism of change in dynamic psychotherapy, but only one treatment component study ha
86       This finding shows that evidence-based psychotherapy can be delivered, without modification, vi
87 ifiable risk factors of early nonresponse to psychotherapy can be identified at the outset of treatme
88  the Cognitive Behavioral Analysis System of Psychotherapy (CBASP) compared with that of nonspecific
89                                          The psychotherapy (CBT-ip) arm showed a 51.4% seizure reduct
90  only, cognitive behavioral therapy informed psychotherapy (CBT-ip) only, CBT-ip with medication (ser
91                  Cognitive-behavioural-based psychotherapy (CBT; comprising cognitive-behavioural and
92  improvements in moderate symptoms following psychotherapy (change in Rhodes score [range, 0 {no symp
93 of a clinical trial on the efficacy of group psychotherapy, clinical management, methylphenidate, and
94 ild trauma treatments for PTSD, child-parent psychotherapy, cognitive behavioral interventions for tr
95          After an illness episode, intensive psychotherapy combined with best-practice pharmacotherap
96  Like Lane et al., we believe that change in psychotherapy comes about by updating dysfunctional memo
97 d trial of a newly developed transdiagnostic psychotherapy, Common Elements Treatment Approach (CETA)
98 s no difference between rates of recovery in psychotherapy compared with collaborative care (64% comp
99 sorder were likely to benefit from intensive psychotherapy compared with collaborative care (84% comp
100 -year psychotherapy and guideline-concordant psychotherapy compared with pharmacotherapy; however, Ca
101 ly superior compared with non-trauma-focused psychotherapy comparison conditions.
102              Interventions evaluated include psychotherapies, complementary and alternative medicines
103 he schema therapy and clarification-oriented psychotherapy conditions.
104 usted odds ratio=0.81; 95% CI=0.73, 0.89) of psychotherapy continuation.
105 s never been systematically assessed whether psychotherapy, continuation ECT, or antidepressant medic
106 re and after 8 weeks of MORE or a supportive psychotherapy control, veterans receiving LTOT (N = 62)
107 1.51), but the percentage of those receiving psychotherapy declined from 53.6% (1998) to 43.1% (2007)
108 .1% to 5.1%, and the percentage who received psychotherapy decreased from 56.6% to 37.5%.
109                                              Psychotherapies designed to promote stress coping potent
110 o benefit from a range of interventions (eg, psychotherapy) distinct from the requirements of patient
111                                      Dynamic psychotherapy (DT) is widely practiced in the community,
112 d numerous empirically tested evidence-based psychotherapies (EBPs) for psychopathology in children a
113 er current treatments such as trauma-focused psychotherapy engage these targets and restore healthy n
114 s of adults with diagnosed BPD randomized to psychotherapy exclusively or to a control intervention.
115 s are the best-studied treatment option, but psychotherapy, exercise therapy, and electroconvulsive t
116 hare the idea of Lane et al. that successful psychotherapy exerts its effects through memory reconsol
117 9; beta=28.21, p<0.0001), and total national psychotherapy expenditures ($10.94 and $7.17 billion; z=
118 sits of persons receiving psychotherapy; and psychotherapy expenditures.
119 ants received up to 30 sessions of intensive psychotherapy (family-focused therapy, interpersonal and
120 , a core specific technique in psychodynamic psychotherapy, focuses on exploring the patient-therapis
121                               They felt that psychotherapies for BPD often had an extreme focus on sp
122 ed clinical trials to assess the efficacy of psychotherapies for BPD populations.
123 ient cognitive behavioural and psychodynamic psychotherapies for FND.
124                                    Effective psychotherapies for late-life depression are underutiliz
125 osure, have been the most frequently studied psychotherapies for military-related PTSD.
126 inical trials (RCTs) of individual and group psychotherapies for PTSD in military personnel and veter
127 tive behavioral therapy for PTSD, structured psychotherapy for adolescents responding to chronic stre
128 icle summarizes research and commentaries on psychotherapy for adults with intellectual disabilities
129 ement Program randomized controlled trial of psychotherapy for bipolar depression, participants recei
130 nd symptom-focused version of psychoanalytic psychotherapy for bulimia nervosa.
131                           Emotion-regulation psychotherapy for families shows some benefits for both
132 prospective studies of individual outpatient psychotherapy for FND with at least five adult participa
133  depressive symptoms by mid-treatment during psychotherapy for late-life depression with executive dy
134                       Telemedicine-delivered psychotherapy for older adults with major depression is
135                                  Addition of psychotherapy for patients who do not achieve remission
136 undertaken with renewed vigour if specialist psychotherapy for people with intellectual disability is
137 ction learning has the potential to optimize psychotherapy for persistent anxiety-related disorders.
138    This study supports the use of manualized psychotherapy for PNES and successful training of mental
139  reminders has been considered imperative in psychotherapy for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
140 ylation levels in relation to trauma-focused psychotherapy for PTSD in soldiers that obtained remissi
141                                Interpersonal psychotherapy for the prevention of excess weight gain m
142  was inferior to short-term psychoanalytical psychotherapy for the same outcome.
143  novel approach; investigating MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for the treatment of anxiety in people wit
144                 Used most notably as aids to psychotherapy for the treatment of mood disorders and al
145 iety may be in particular need of additional psychotherapy for treating acute depression.
146 e humanities, social sciences, medicine, and psychotherapy for understanding human meaning making.
147 ant overall increases occurred in the use of psychotherapy (from 4.2% to 6.0%) and psychotropic medic
148                                Interpersonal psychotherapy further reduced objective binge eating.
149  the CBT group and 15% in the psychoanalytic psychotherapy group had stopped binge eating and purging
150 establish the effectiveness of group support psychotherapy (GSP) delivered by lay health workers for
151                                Group support psychotherapy (GSP) is a culturally sensitive interventi
152 menology, psychobiology, pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy has contributed to better recognition, ass
153 ts receiving antidepressants, treatment with psychotherapy has declined.
154                         Although advances in psychotherapy have been made in recent years, drug disco
155 epressants), or psychological interventions (psychotherapy, hypnotherapy, cognitive and behavioral th
156     We developed Individual Meaning-Centered Psychotherapy (IMCP) to address the need for brief inter
157 receive meta-cognitive therapy or supportive psychotherapy in a group modality.
158 d placebo (Comparison of Methylphenidate and Psychotherapy in Adult ADHD Study Trial).
159  a recognized need to assess the efficacy of psychotherapy in adult ADHD.
160 tes how therapeutic change occurs, grounding psychotherapy in brain science.
161 of pharmacotherapy in the acute phase and of psychotherapy in its residual phase.
162 e current indications for the application of psychotherapy in major depressive disorder are discussed
163 udies have examined the long-term outcome of psychotherapy in social anxiety disorder.
164 al linear modeling revealed that response to psychotherapy in the MDD group was predicted by pretreat
165 gated recent trends in the use of outpatient psychotherapy in the United States.
166 ew empirical studies of the effectiveness of psychotherapy in this context over recent years despite
167 ), and relaxation therapy (an active control psychotherapy) in 110 unmedicated patients who had chron
168 sregulation, as an adjunct to evidence-based psychotherapy, in an effort to improve interpersonal fun
169 otherapy, with and without complicated grief psychotherapy, in the treatment of complicated grief.
170 lled data support the efficacy of a targeted psychotherapy including elements that foster resolution
171                         Cognitive behavioral psychotherapies, including exposure therapy, are an alte
172                                              Psychotherapy increased lateral frontopolar cortex activ
173 psychopharmacology, and cognitive behavioral psychotherapy intervention (n = 104) or usual care contr
174 ychological treatments such as group support psychotherapy into existing HIV interventions might impr
175                                Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) has been developed for the treatment
176                                Interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) is an effective specialty treatment
177             The authors tested interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT), which has demonstrated antidepressa
178                              Streamlining of psychotherapies is a necessary first step for this purpo
179                               Exposure-based psychotherapy is a first-line treatment for posttraumati
180                  This model of drug-assisted psychotherapy is a possible alternative to existing phar
181 fective common feature in divergent forms of psychotherapy is a process of memory reconsolidation int
182 that a more plausible mechanism of change in psychotherapy is acquisition of adaptive emotion regulat
183            The need for eliciting emotion in psychotherapy is as the authors say it is, but their hyp
184 re-nourishment and anorexia nervosa-specific psychotherapy is most effective.
185 h on memory, emotion, and behavior change in psychotherapy is needed, which Lane at al. advance.
186                                              Psychotherapy is recommended for patients with mild to m
187 y-trace." The aim of reconsolidation, and of psychotherapy, is to improve predictions about how to me
188  focal nature of the self to every aspect of psychotherapy, it is a more useful construct on which to
189 Change in defensive functioning in long-term psychotherapy largely follows the hierarchy of defense a
190 alectical behavior therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy may also be applicable to adolescent bulim
191 s then used to identify individuals for whom psychotherapy may be preferred to SSRI pharmacotherapy o
192                                              Psychotherapy may reduce suicide attempts in some high-r
193 sonality disorders entered long-term dynamic psychotherapy (mean=248 weeks) and subsequent follow-alo
194 and the benefits and harms of treatment with psychotherapy, medications, and collaborative care model
195 l trials included in the pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy meta-analyses with the Cochrane risk of bi
196 at studies combining prazosin with effective psychotherapies might demonstrate further benefit.
197 6, 95% CrI -1.03 to -0.11) and interpersonal psychotherapy, mindfulness, and supportive therapy (-0.8
198 ent for Depression, an empirically validated psychotherapy modality designed to increase engagement w
199 rd processing is predictive of response to a psychotherapy modality that promotes improving approach-
200 1; 95% CI, 0.12-0.69) were the only types of psychotherapies more effective than control intervention
201                                   First-line psychotherapies most often recommended for PTSD consist
202                                              Psychotherapies, most notably dialectical behavior thera
203  (N=36) and 6% of patients in psychoanalytic psychotherapy (N=34) had stopped binge eating and purgin
204 ment as usual, N=135; clarification-oriented psychotherapy, N=41).
205  effects can be mitigated through the use of psychotherapy needs to be assessed.
206 n, including antidepressants, evidence-based psychotherapies, nonpharmacological somatic treatments,
207 ation of the Evidence Base for Psychodynamic Psychotherapy of the APA Committee on Research on Psychi
208                 Effective treatments include psychotherapy (often cognitive behavioral therapy) and p
209 eated for mental health conditions with only psychotherapy, only psychotropic medication, or their co
210 ived either 2 years of weekly psychoanalytic psychotherapy or 20 sessions of CBT over 5 months.
211 d to participate in an adapted interpersonal psychotherapy or a health-education group program for 12
212 ines that recommend either an evidence-based psychotherapy or antidepressant medication for nonpsycho
213              His symptoms did not respond to psychotherapy or pharmacotherapy.
214 ntal health clinicians trained to administer psychotherapy or psychopharmacology to outpatients with
215 on of psychotropic medications, provision of psychotherapy, or psychiatrist care.
216                               Evidence-based psychotherapies outperform usual care, but the EBP advan
217                               Evidence-based psychotherapies outperformed usual care.
218               Most depressed patients prefer psychotherapy over antidepressant medications, but acces
219  Americans with recent major depression used psychotherapy over pharmacotherapy, and these difference
220          Given many patients' preference for psychotherapy over pharmacotherapy, increasing patient a
221  occurred in annual psychotherapy visits per psychotherapy patient (mean values, 9.7 and 7.9; adjuste
222                               With regard to psychotherapy, patients with co-occurring depression and
223 atient self-management, exercise, structured psychotherapy, pharmacotherapy, monitoring of therapy, a
224 cotherapy options with or without adjunctive psychotherapy (phase 2).
225 pared CBT-AD with information and supportive psychotherapy plus adherence counselling using the Life-
226 cal efficacy of MCT compared to current best psychotherapy practice, CBT, in adults with major depres
227  determined whether an adapted interpersonal psychotherapy prevention program is more efficacious for
228          To be economically viable, existing psychotherapy protocols need to be made briefer and more
229 ession using the Randomized Controlled Trial Psychotherapy Quality Rating Scale (RCT-PQRS).
230 ts developed the Randomized Controlled Trial Psychotherapy Quality Rating Scale (RCT-PQRS).
231 rugs are studied as adjuncts or catalysts to psychotherapy, rather than as stand-alone drug treatment
232 low-income, conflict-affected country, group psychotherapy reduced PTSD symptoms and combined depress
233                   Trial evidence showed that psychotherapy reduced suicide attempts in high-risk adul
234 gnitive behavioral therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy remain the most established treatments for
235 ercentage of the general population who used psychotherapy remained stable.
236                          A critical task for psychotherapy research is to create treatments that can
237                                         Five psychotherapy researchers from a range of therapeutic or
238                                         Many psychotherapy researchers hold the position that specifi
239 , emotion-focused therapy, and psychodynamic psychotherapy, results from the updating of prior emotio
240  a beneficial effect of interventions (group psychotherapy, school-based support, and other psychosoc
241            Adding an extended phase to acute psychotherapy seems promising in this population.
242 choice between antidepressant medication and psychotherapy, selection of a specific antidepressant me
243                            A median of eight psychotherapy sessions over 2.5 years for each participa
244  placebo (n = 5) in combination with two 8-h psychotherapy sessions.
245 ight 90-minute multifamily psychoeducational psychotherapy sessions.
246 rventions of either MCGP or supportive group psychotherapy (SGP).
247 ic treatments and whether pharmacotherapy or psychotherapy should be primarily used.
248                       The use of any form of psychotherapy should be supported by sufficient evidence
249 also had a greater effect than psychodynamic psychotherapy (SMD -0.56, 95% CrI -1.03 to -0.11) and in
250 compared with that of nonspecific supportive psychotherapy (SP).
251                                           In psychotherapy studies, wait-list designs showed larger e
252  that is common but typically unaddressed in psychotherapy syntheses.
253 ty disorder were more likely to recover with psychotherapy than with collaborative care (66% compared
254                                              Psychotherapies that focus on relationships and separati
255  for PTSD consist mainly of "trauma-focused" psychotherapies that involve focusing on details of the
256 Treatment for Depression (BATD), a validated psychotherapy that promotes engagement with rewarding st
257             "Engage" is a novel, streamlined psychotherapy that relies on neurobiology to identify co
258 ty is facilitated by rehabilitation, such as psychotherapy, that guides the plastic networks, and psy
259       Further studies of depression-specific psychotherapies, the continued application of antidepres
260  to inform the choice between medication and psychotherapy, the selection of specific medication, or
261 but mostly show superiority of psychodynamic psychotherapy to an inactive comparator.
262 ully engage rural veterans in evidence-based psychotherapy to improve PTSD outcomes.
263 This finding cannot be extrapolated to other psychotherapies, to individual ADMs, or to inpatients.
264 e of healthy controls was less responsive to psychotherapy treatment for PTSD and failed to respond t
265 eline and after 12 weeks (of citalopram plus psychotherapy treatment for the depressed cohort).
266 fetime anxiety in bipolar patients moderates psychotherapy treatment outcome.
267                               Medication and psychotherapy treatments for posttraumatic stress disord
268 he Adolescent Depression Antidepressants and Psychotherapy Trial (ADAPT).
269 portance of discerning quality in individual psychotherapy trials and also point toward specific meth
270 doses of antidepressants (12 [80%] of the 15 psychotherapy trials explicitly allowed antidepressants)
271                                 In contrast, psychotherapy trials had lower dropout rates and provide
272 s in the methods used in pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy trials, indirect comparisons of their effe
273            The authors computed rates of any psychotherapy use; percentages of persons treated for me
274 ion and differentially affected spending and psychotherapy utilization across groups.
275  with antidepressant use improving slightly, psychotherapy utilization fluctuating, and follow-up vis
276  beta=-1.53, p<0.0001), mean expenditure per psychotherapy visit ($122.80 and $94.59; beta=28.21, p<0
277 ndividuals who made more than one outpatient psychotherapy visit during that calendar year.
278                                       Annual psychotherapy visits decreased significantly only for in
279                                        While psychotherapy visits increased from 2.25 to 3.17 per 100
280 on, or their combination; the mean number of psychotherapy visits of persons receiving psychotherapy;
281                  Declines occurred in annual psychotherapy visits per psychotherapy patient (mean val
282                              Effect sizes of psychotherapies vs placebo tended to be higher than thos
283 for systematic reviews on pharmacotherapy or psychotherapy vs placebo, pharmacotherapy vs psychothera
284 ically significant difference in response to psychotherapy vs SSRI pharmacotherapy.
285 in Beck Depression Inventory-II scores after psychotherapy was 12.04 points, a clinically meaningful
286   The percentage of persons using outpatient psychotherapy was 3.37% in 1998 and 3.18% in 2007 (adjus
287 stand-alone designs (in which an independent psychotherapy was compared with control interventions) f
288                   Highly structured specific psychotherapy was moderately more effective than nonspec
289         In follow-up analyses, interpersonal psychotherapy was more efficacious than health education
290 , and suicide) at posttest, the investigated psychotherapies were moderately more effective than cont
291 ance psychotropic medications and supportive psychotherapy were held constant.
292                           Antispasmodics and psychotherapy were more frequently prescribed in IBS-C,
293 a form of therapy called mentalization-based psychotherapy, which aims to improve emotional regulatio
294 d 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine-assisted psychotherapy, which recently surfaced as promising stra
295 ion treatment, including both medication and psychotherapy, while adjusting for patient demographic a
296             Cognitive therapy is a system of psychotherapy with a powerful theoretical infrastructure
297  Of 24 adequate comparisons of psychodynamic psychotherapy with an "inactive" comparator, 18 found dy
298 trial that compared an empirically supported psychotherapy with selective serotonin reuptake inhibito
299 s received some treatment, usually including psychotherapy, within the first 3 months after identific
300 ings inform a novel conceptualization of how psychotherapy works, and they identify a promising targe

 
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