2014
DOI: 10.1007/s10942-014-0178-3
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We’ve Come a Long Way, Baby!: Evolution and Revolution in CBT with Youth

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Cited by 20 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…A second way to enhance scalability of evidence-based treatments is to consider digital, or internet-based, versions rather than those using in-person delivery. Growing research indicates that digital interventions are feasible and acceptable for youth (Friedberg et al, 2014;Richardson, Stallard, & Velleman, 2010) and may be just as efficacious as in-person delivery (Werner-Seidler, Johnston, & Christensen, 2018;Zachariae, Lyby, Ritterband, & O'Toole, 2016). Moreover, young people are likely to choose electronic versions of interventions when available (de Bruin, Bogels, Oort, & Meijer, 2015).…”
Section: Scalable and Adaptive Treatmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A second way to enhance scalability of evidence-based treatments is to consider digital, or internet-based, versions rather than those using in-person delivery. Growing research indicates that digital interventions are feasible and acceptable for youth (Friedberg et al, 2014;Richardson, Stallard, & Velleman, 2010) and may be just as efficacious as in-person delivery (Werner-Seidler, Johnston, & Christensen, 2018;Zachariae, Lyby, Ritterband, & O'Toole, 2016). Moreover, young people are likely to choose electronic versions of interventions when available (de Bruin, Bogels, Oort, & Meijer, 2015).…”
Section: Scalable and Adaptive Treatmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The potential benefits of this conceptually unified approach have been enumerated elsewhere (Friedberg et al., ; Rohde, ); these treatments have the potential to reduce the number of separate protocols that clinicians must learn and, therefore, to increase clinician and supervisor efficiency while increasing capacity to meet the needs of individual complex clients and complex, variegated caseloads (Girio‐Herrera & Ehrenreich‐May, ). These efforts also reflect a thoughtful approach to putative mechanisms of change, streamlining the delivery of evidence‐based care when those processes appear to overlap (Rohde, ).…”
Section: Structured Methods For Addressing Comorbidity: Three Evidencmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Roer as unhas, chupar os dedos, compulsões e hipervigilâncias são outros sintomas comportamentais comuns de ansiedade. As crianças podem se envolver nesses comportamentos para se acalmar ou para lidar com situações ameaçadoras (FRIEDBERG;McCLURE, 2014). Estudos retrospectivos sugerem que existe uma continuidade na presença dos transtornos de ansiedade da infância e adolescência para a idade adulta, no entanto, no transtorno de ansiedade de separação, pode ocorrer dois processos distintos: a) remissão dos sintomas e b) evolução para outros quadros psicopatológicos, em particular para Transtorno de Ansiedade Generalizada ou Transtorno de Pânico ou Depressão (SUVEG, 2005).…”
Section: Transtorno De Ansiedade De Separação Na Infânciaunclassified