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1 rs) and non-pharmacotherapy (e.g., cognitive-behavior therapy).
2  requires effective treatment options beyond behavior therapy.
3 h poor response to medications and cognitive behavior therapy.
4 that included multiple elements of cognitive behavior therapy.
5 guided self-help, an adaptation of cognitive behavior therapy.
6 strongly to the ideal prototype of cognitive behavior therapy.
7 sions and hallucinations following cognitive behavior therapy.
8 lorie diet, increased physical activity, and behavior therapy.
9  treatment of bulimia nervosa with cognitive behavior therapy.
10 atment outcomes for imipramine and cognitive behavior therapy.
11 ) consisting of diet, physical activity, and behavior therapy.
12 were relatively less responsive to cognitive behavior therapy.
13  3 weeks with intensive individual cognitive behavior therapy.
14 tation of the skills emphasized in cognitive behavior therapy.
15 skills training, play therapy, and cognitive behavior therapy.
16  with major depressive disorder to cognitive behavior therapy.
17  escitalopram and poor response to cognitive behavior therapy.
18  with combination escitalopram and cognitive behavior therapy.
19 /d) or 16 sessions of manual-based cognitive behavior therapy.
20 tch to a different medication plus cognitive behavior therapy.
21 RI or venlafaxine, with or without cognitive behavior therapy.
22 nal and social rhythm therapy, and cognitive behavior therapy.
23 arly diagnosis is critical to the outcome of behavior therapies.
24  primary analysis: 12 remitters to cognitive behavior therapy, 11 remitters to escitalopram, 9 nonres
25 ivational enhancement therapy plus cognitive behavior therapy (12 sessions over 6 months), or usual c
26 for a second testing session after cognitive behavior therapy; 13 comparison children participated a
27                Before and after 7-week group behavior therapy, 17 patients with DSM-III-R OCD were as
28 bined) was significantly lower for cognitive behavior therapy (22%) than for nutritional counseling (
29 ropout rate was similar to regular cognitive behavior therapy (30%) and unrelated to treatment arm.
30 tly more of the patients receiving cognitive behavior therapy (44%) than nutritional counseling (7%).
31 gher rate than the group receiving cognitive behavior therapy (53% versus 22%).
32 gher proportion of patients in the cognitive behavior therapy (71%) and supportive stress-management
33 hose who completed self-management cognitive behavior therapy achieved high-end state functioning at
34 ls and other human disorders suggesting that behavior therapy acts by way of long-term potentiation o
35                   The effects of dialectical behavior therapy adapted for the treatment of binge/purg
36                       The use of dialectical behavior therapy adapted for treatment of bulimia nervos
37                        A course of cognitive behavior therapy, added to the antipsychotic regimen, is
38 t to evaluate the effect of online cognitive behavior therapy (AF-CBT) on QoL in patients with sympto
39 -effective compared with in-person cognitive behavior therapy alone.
40 s are treated with similar symptom-relieving behavior therapies and medications.
41 triking contrast to 1 year PTTE in cognitive behavior therapy and < 1 week PTTE in serotonin antagoni
42 tation strategy for exposure-based cognitive behavior therapy and (2) conducted in humans diagnosed a
43 n the follow-up study: 25 received cognitive behavior therapy and 28 received relaxation therapy.
44 f 68% of the patients who received cognitive behavior therapy and 36% who received relaxation therapy
45        "Maximizing the Efficacy of Cognitive Behavior Therapy and Contingency Management", registrati
46  therapy, and treatments combining cognitive behavior therapy and contingency management.
47                                    Cognitive behavior therapy and graded exercise can be effective in
48   The relation between response to cognitive behavior therapy and HPA activity was not explained by c
49                                  Dialectical behavior therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy may als
50  promising, as is a combination of cognitive-behavior therapy and morning bright light.
51                              CALM (cognitive behavior therapy and pharmacotherapy medication recommen
52                                     Overall, behavior therapy and pharmacotherapy produce similar sho
53                              CALM (cognitive behavior therapy and pharmacotherapy recommendations) an
54 ) was associated with remission to cognitive behavior therapy and poor response to escitalopram, whil
55    Psychotherapies, most notably dialectical behavior therapy and psychodynamic approaches, are effec
56               Psychotherapy with dialectical behavior therapy and psychodynamic therapy are first-lin
57            Psychotherapy such as dialectical behavior therapy and psychodynamic therapy reduce sympto
58                               Both cognitive behavior therapy and supportive stress management are ef
59 e constructs across six domains; dialectical behavior therapy and supportive treatment were associate
60 is argues for additional approaches, such as behavior therapy and/or longer duration of hormone thera
61 luding habit reversal or acceptance-enhanced behavior therapy) and medication (serotonin reuptake inh
62 o escitalopram, 9 nonresponders to cognitive behavior therapy, and 6 nonresponders to escitalopram.
63 ed with motivational interviewing, cognitive behavior therapy, and family intervention over routine p
64 ed with motivational interviewing, cognitive behavior therapy, and family or caregiver intervention.
65 ivational enhancement therapy (MET)/CBT, MET behavior therapy, and pharmacological treatment.
66 pics were social anxiety disorder, cognitive behavior therapy, and randomized controlled trial.
67 ement, relapse prevention, general cognitive behavior therapy, and treatments combining cognitive beh
68                                  Dialectical behavior therapy appears to be uniquely effective in red
69 a psychological treatment based on cognitive behavior therapy, appears ineffective, but treatment wit
70             Although grief-focused cognitive behavior therapies are the most empirically supported tr
71 utamatergic pathways and that the effects of behavior therapy are potentiated by an NMDA agonist.
72 for panic disorder, exposure-based cognitive behavior therapy, are reviewed, and their application to
73         While treatment guidelines recommend behavior therapy as a first-line intervention, patients
74  the first empirical evaluation of cognitive behavior therapy as a posthospitalization treatment for
75  year of diagnosis, including medication and behavior therapy as defined by billing codes.
76  aimed to evaluate whether blended cognitive behavior therapy (bCBT) can reduce the severity of FCR i
77 tion; n = 32 with complete data) or Internet behavior therapy (behavior therapy; n = 33 with complete
78 vioral interventions, specifically brain-gut behavior therapies (BGBTs), in patients with disorders o
79 d with obese adolescents in combination with behavior therapy (BT).
80 comprehensive program of diet, exercise, and behavior therapy but are typically prescribed with minim
81 cognitive behavior therapy favored cognitive behavior therapy, but tests comparing the two modalities
82 nin reuptake inhibitors (SRIs) and cognitive behavior therapy by exposure and ritual prevention are b
83                                    Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) among youth with obsessive-compul
84 mized controlled trial comparing a cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) and pharmacotherapy intervention
85                                    Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) can be effective for late-life ge
86 ve effectiveness of sertraline and cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) for depression, quality of life,
87 l effectiveness of protocol-driven cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) for insomnia, delivered by oncolo
88 ffectiveness of family therapy and cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) guided self-care in adolescents w
89                                    Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) has been established as efficacio
90                                    Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) has been identified as the treatm
91                      Grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) has been shown to be effective in
92                   Suicide-specific cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) is effective for reducing suicide
93                                    Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) is effective in the treatment of
94 ation with short-term OCD-specific cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) may provide additional benefit.
95 nd, randomized controlled trial of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) versus usual care (UC) for major
96  fluoxetine hydrochloride therapy, cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), and their combination in adolesc
97 epression, clinicians should offer cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), behavioral activation (BA), MBSR
98 wn for family therapy, followed by cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), motivational enhancement therapy
99 ake inhibitor (SSRI) sertraline or cognitive behavior therapy (CBT), participants completed an emotio
100 d depressed individuals respond to cognitive behavior therapy (CBT).
101 ital recovery support for adjuvant cognitive behavior therapy (CBT).
102 ersonal and social rhythm therapy, cognitive behavior therapy [CBT], or family-focused therapy), and
103        "Computer-Based Training in Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT4CBT)", registration number: NCT014
104 BWL) and guided self-help based on cognitive behavior therapy (CBTgsh) have both resulted in short-te
105                  Computer-assisted cognitive behavior therapy (CCBT) has been proposed as a method fo
106 ses in binge/purge behavior with dialectical behavior therapy compared to the waiting-list condition.
107                                    Cognitive behavior therapy compared with EUC significantly improve
108                      Grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy comprised 5 sessions of recalling memor
109 ] female), 50 in the grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy condition and 50 in the mindfulness-bas
110 of treatment, participants in both cognitive behavior therapy conditions had significant reductions i
111  the antidepressant medication and cognitive behavior therapy conditions of the Treatment of Depressi
112       In this study, grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy conferred more benefit for core prolong
113                                  Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) is a treatment for suicidal behav
114                                  Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) is an empirically supported treat
115   Limited evidence suggests that dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) reduces suicidal ideation compare
116 ared the efficacy of 6 months of dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) to 6 months of selective serotoni
117         Extinction, the laboratory analog of behavior therapy, does not erase conditioned fear memori
118 on after 12 weeks of treatment withcognitive behavior therapy, duloxetine, or escitalopram were prosp
119  forms of psychotherapy other than cognitive behavior therapy, even though there is little informatio
120 durable, with 87% of available responders to behavior therapy exhibiting continued benefit 6 months f
121 aring antidepressant medication to cognitive behavior therapy favored cognitive behavior therapy, but
122                 The manual-based dialectical behavior therapy focused on training in emotion regulati
123  to either escitalopram oxalate or cognitive behavior therapy for 12 weeks.
124  randomized clinical trial of medication and behavior therapy for ADHD but transitioned to a longitud
125 ents the effects of exposure-based cognitive behavior therapy for anxiety, obsessive-compulsive, and
126 acebo in augmenting the effects of cognitive behavior therapy for anxiety, obsessive-compulsive, and
127 s who will and will not respond to cognitive behavior therapy for bulimia nervosa, potentially allowi
128                                    Cognitive behavior therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome can produc
129                          The availability of behavior therapy for individuals with Tourette syndrome
130                           Although cognitive behavior therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) has been establish
131  reports on an open-label trial of cognitive behavior therapy for insomnia and disturbing dreams in c
132 ing, problem solving, assertion training and behavior therapy for insomnia), and conducting a master
133                      Components of cognitive behavior therapy for insomnia, especially stimulus contr
134 amatergic receptor, enhances the efficacy of behavior therapy for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
135  of changes in caudate nucleus function with behavior therapy for obsessive-compulsive disorder.
136 e use of D-cycloserine as an augmentation of behavior therapy for OCD and extend findings in animals
137                    Five aspects of cognitive behavior therapy for schizophrenia are addressed: 1) evi
138 road perspective on the subject of cognitive behavior therapy for schizophrenia for the American read
139 trength of the evidence supporting cognitive behavior therapy for schizophrenia suggests that this te
140 ice and data supporting the use of cognitive behavior therapy for schizophrenia.
141 irical evidence, to be superior to cognitive behavior therapy for the acute treatment of severely dep
142  support the efficacy of pharmacotherapy and behavior therapy for the treatment of insomnia, no meta-
143 dy of evidence supports the use of cognitive behavior therapy for the treatment of schizophrenia.
144  combination of diet, physical activity, and behavior therapy (frequently referred to as lifestyle mo
145                                  Dialectical behavior therapy (g = 0.34; 95% CI, 0.15-0.53) and psych
146  Participants in the grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy group also demonstrated greater reducti
147 ivational enhancement therapy plus cognitive behavior therapy group and -0.19% (CI, -0.53% to 0.16%)
148                                          The behavior therapy group lost a mean (SD) of 4.0 (2.8) kg
149   Repeated-measures analyses showed that the behavior therapy group lost more weight than the educati
150                          Participants in the behavior therapy group received additional behavioral pr
151  participants in the grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy group showed greater reduction in PG-13
152 waist circumference were also greater in the behavior therapy group than in the education group at bo
153 were employed, but patients in the cognitive behavior therapy group worked significantly more mean ho
154                                    Cognitive behavior therapy had greater and more durable effects th
155                                    Cognitive behavior therapy has fared as well as antidepressant med
156  often labeled as the generic term cognitive behavior therapy, has been shown to be effective in redu
157 tary therapy, physical activity, and ongoing behavior therapy have been endorsed by the National Inst
158 rents' views of the credibility of cognitive behavior therapy improved compared with parents' views o
159 d with 18 sessions of manual-based cognitive behavior therapy in a three-site study.
160 efficacy of any psychotherapy, and cognitive behavior therapy in particular, in posthospitalization c
161 6Met genotype predicts response to cognitive behavior therapy in PTSD and is in accord with evidence
162 otherapy, we examined responses to cognitive behavior therapy in relation to electroencephalographic
163 therefore investigated response to cognitive behavior therapy in relation to pretreatment measures of
164 s of antidepressant medication and cognitive behavior therapy in the severely depressed outpatient su
165 nificantly more patients receiving cognitive behavior therapy, in relation to those in relaxation the
166          Guided self-help based on cognitive behavior therapy is a first-line treatment option for mo
167                                              Behavior therapy is a recommended intervention for Toure
168                                Comprehensive behavior therapy is a safe and effective intervention fo
169                                    Cognitive behavior therapy is an effective treatment for major dep
170 tivational enhancement therapy and cognitive behavior therapy is feasible for adults with poorly cont
171                                    Cognitive behavior therapy is more efficacious than SBFT or NST fo
172 rapy (often labeled generically as cognitive behavior therapy) is efficacious either alone or as an a
173 e completer group, self-management cognitive behavior therapy led to greater reductions in PTSD, depr
174 nt-to-treat group, self-management cognitive behavior therapy led to sharper declines in daily log-on
175                    Self-management cognitive behavior therapy may be a way of delivering effective tr
176                                    Cognitive behavior therapy may benefit the large number of patient
177                                              Behavior therapy may offer an alternative but has not be
178  Hamilton scores were lower in the cognitive behavior therapy (mean [standard error], 5.5 [1.0]) and
179 mized, controlled trials comparing cognitive behavior therapy, medication, and their combination to p
180 zed controlled trials, including dialectical behavior therapy, mentalization-based therapy, transfere
181 nged grief disorder, grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy might be the more effective choice, tak
182 ly assigned to 8 sessions during 10 weeks of behavior therapy (n = 61) or a control treatment consist
183                                    Cognitive behavior therapy (n = 70) conducted in the primary care
184 ndomly assigned to self-management cognitive behavior therapy (N=24) or supportive counseling (N=21).
185 mmended standard treatment (either cognitive behavior therapy [N=36] or imipramine [N=22]).
186 rvention (8 weeks of manual-guided cognitive behavior therapy) (n = 90), or referral to community men
187 complete data) or Internet behavior therapy (behavior therapy; n = 33 with complete data).
188             Neither treatment with cognitive behavior therapy nor less severe major depression predic
189 g and the acknowledged preclinical model for behavior therapy of human anxiety.
190 ty during pregnancy through use of Cognitive Behavior Therapy, on birth outcomes with 796 women in Rw
191 randomly assigned to 20 weeks of dialectical behavior therapy or 20 weeks of a waiting-list compariso
192 cted to receive 1 year of either dialectical behavior therapy or general psychiatric management for b
193               One year of either dialectical behavior therapy or general psychiatric management was a
194 isorder than treatment with either cognitive behavior therapy or imipramine; results obtained with em
195 e treated for 16 weeks with either cognitive behavior therapy or interpersonal psychotherapy alone (p
196 ad relapsed following, a course of cognitive behavior therapy or interpersonal psychotherapy were ran
197 0-minute sessions of grief-focused cognitive behavior therapy or mindfulness-based cognitive therapy
198 y assigned to 1 year of outpatient cognitive behavior therapy or nutritional counseling.
199 signed to receive the two kinds of cognitive behavior therapy or received standard community treatmen
200                    Twelve weeks of cognitive behavior therapy or supportive stress management.
201 n = 139) were randomly assigned to cognitive behavior therapy or usual care for depression.
202 nsference-focused psychotherapy, dialectical behavior therapy, or supportive treatment and received m
203 rbid posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) on behavior therapy outcome for obsessive-compulsive disord
204 en the six genetic risk scores and cognitive behavior therapy outcome.
205                 Interventions: Site-specific behavior therapy plus 10 mg of sibutramine or placebo.
206 tinction of the additive effect of cognitive behavior therapy plus motivational enhancement therapy f
207 bined psychotherapy (8 sessions of cognitive behavior therapy) plus pharmacotherapy (citalopram).
208 Cognitive-behavioral therapy and dialectical behavior therapy prevent suicidal behavior.
209 underwent an 8-week exposure-based cognitive behavior therapy program and provided mouth swabs or sal
210                       Sibutramine added to a behavior therapy program reduced BMI and body weight mor
211      In addition, adherence to the cognitive behavior therapy prototype yielded more positive correla
212                                              Behavior therapy remains the recommended first-line trea
213 ograms were complying with the new cognitive behavior therapy requirement.
214                                              Behavior therapy responders had significant (P < .05) bi
215 tion between sleep abnormality and cognitive behavior therapy response was not significant in the com
216                                              Behavior therapy resulted in a greater reduction in slee
217                                    Cognitive behavior therapy resulted in more rapid relief in interv
218 he interpersonal psychotherapy and cognitive behavior therapy sessions adhered most strongly to the i
219 of interpersonal psychotherapy and cognitive behavior therapy sessions conducted as part of the NIMH
220                  One hour before each of the behavior therapy sessions, the participants received eit
221  were offered additional in-person cognitive behavior therapy sessions.
222                        Then they received 10 behavior therapy sessions.
223                                    Cognitive behavior therapy showed a lower rate of MDD at the end o
224 ion (n = 6227) that introduced 4 dialectical behavior therapy skills (mindfulness, mindfulness of cur
225 of self-harm, and offering brief dialectical behavior therapy skills training significantly increased
226              Both groups receiving cognitive behavior therapy sustained greater improvement in substa
227 d to 1 of 3 treatments: individual cognitive behavior therapy, systemic behavior family therapy (SBFT
228                          Use of a specialist behavior therapy team in addition to standard treatment
229 ts associated with treatment by a specialist behavior therapy team.
230                   Community-based specialist behavior therapy teams may be helpful in managing challe
231 striction, increasing physical activity, and behavior therapy techniques.
232  52 [74%]) examined trauma-focused cognitive behavior therapies (TF-CBTs).
233 rventions - such as trauma-focused cognitive behavior therapy (TF-CBT) and eye movement desensitizati
234                     More participants in the behavior therapy than education group achieved the 5% we
235  can lead to the development of drugs and/or behavior therapies that reduce the impact that these cue
236 mpare the efficacy of a manualized cognitive behavior therapy that addresses both posttraumatic stres
237 (seeking safety) with a manualized cognitive behavior therapy that addresses only substance abuse (re
238                                        After behavior therapy the patients evidenced significant decr
239 d after 16 weeks of treatment with cognitive behavior therapy to determine the stability or reversibi
240 d treatment is for the addition of cognitive behavior therapy to pharmacotherapy for patients with ag
241 borderline personality disorder: dialectical behavior therapy, transference-focused psychotherapy, an
242 tients with BED, with IPT (or full cognitive behavior therapy) used for patients with low self-esteem
243 ef interpersonal psychotherapy and cognitive behavior therapy using the Psychotherapy Process Q-Set,
244 d, Internet-based, self-management cognitive behavior therapy versus Internet-based supportive counse
245 n a randomized controlled trial of cognitive behavior therapy versus relaxation therapy for chronic f
246 evaluated the long-term outcome of cognitive behavior therapy versus relaxation therapy for patients
247                                              Behavior therapy was associated with a significantly gre
248                                  Dialectical behavior therapy was associated with better outcomes in
249 D-cycloserine versus placebo augmentation of behavior therapy was conducted in 23 OCD patients.
250                                    Cognitive behavior therapy was initiated at a median of 17 days af
251              Response to inpatient cognitive behavior therapy was inversely associated with pretreatm
252                                    Cognitive behavior therapy was markedly underused.
253                                    Cognitive behavior therapy was positively evaluated and was still
254                                    Cognitive behavior therapy was significantly more effective than n
255                                    Cognitive behavior therapy was superior to usual care at most poin
256 s of antidepressant medication and cognitive behavior therapy were compared within each of the four s
257  patients with major depression to cognitive behavior therapy were complex and that future efforts sh
258 erence-focused psychotherapy and dialectical behavior therapy were significantly associated with impr
259                           Patients receiving behavior therapy who were available for assessment at 6
260 is study examined the efficacy of augmenting behavior therapy with D-cycloserine (DCS) to reduce tic
261 ariance treatment (escitalopram or cognitive behavior therapy) x outcome (remission or nonresponse) i

 
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