Anxiety Disorders: Baker A

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "Anxiety Disorders," originating from Planet Earth —» Baker A.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Review Optimizing inhibitory learning during exposure therapy. 2008

Craske MG, Kircanski K, Zelikowsky M, Mystkowski J, Chowdhury N, Baker A. · Department of Psychology, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1563, USA. · Behav Res Ther. · Pubmed #18005936 No free full text.

Abstract: Prevailing models of exposure therapy for phobias and anxiety disorders construe level of fear throughout exposure trials as an index of corrective learning. However, the evidence, reviewed herein, indicates that neither the degree by which fear reduces nor the ending fear level predict therapeutic outcome. Developments in the theory and science of fear extinction, and learning and memory, indicate that 'performance during training' is not commensurate with learning at the process level. Inhibitory learning is recognized as being central to extinction and access to secondary inhibitory associations is subject to influences such as context and time, rather than fear during extinction training. Strategies for enhancing inhibitory learning, and its retrieval over time and context, are reviewed along with their clinical implications for exposure therapy and directions for future research.

2 Article Effects of political and military traumas on children: the Palestinian case. 1999

Baker A, Shalhoub-Kevorkian N. · Birzeit University, West Bank, Palestine. · Clin Psychol Rev. · Pubmed #10547711 No free full text.

Abstract: Social scientists have long recognized that individuals subjected to traumatic events associated with military and political conflict experience dire psychological consequences. The systematic study of this phenomenon, however, could be considered a nascent event. Research on the psychological sequel of traumatic events (traumatology) is well-rooted in the recognition and development of posttraumatic stress disorder as a separate psychological disorder category. The early studies in this field focused mainly on adult populations. With the recent advent of involvement of children in military conflicts such as in Africa (e.g., Mozambique), the Middle East (e.g., Palestine, Lebanon), and Southeast Asia (e.g., Cambodia), psychologists have taken a keen interest in examining the psychological effects such conflicts reap on children. Hence, a growing but modest body of literature has been amassed within the past 20 years on the subject. This article is an attempt to synthesize this literature in order to examine the universal and culture-specific correlates of political and military trauma. Specifically, the article will focus on the psychological symptoms children display following their exposure to such traumatic events. Special emphasis will be placed on anxiety, phobic, psychosomatic, and depressive symptoms. More importantly, however, an examination will be made to ascertain which factors (e.g., psychosocial, cultural, and political) serve to shield (protect) or predispose (vulnerability) children to psychological dysfunction. Furthermore, the analyses presented will be gender specific. The article will attempt to delineate a paradigm that explains the relationship between trauma, culture, and personality. Although the article will examine studies from various regions, specific emphasis will be placed on the Palestinian experience.

3 Article Post-traumatic stress responses following liver transplantation in older children. 1999

Walker AM, Harris G, Baker A, Kelly D, Houghton J. · Child and Adolescent Psychology Department, North Warwickshire NHS Trust, George Eliot Hospital, Nuneaton, UK. · J Child Psychol Psychiatry. · Pubmed #10190338 No free full text.

Abstract: Eighteen children aged between 7 and 16 years who had undergone a liver transplantation were interviewed using the Child Post-Traumatic Stress Reaction Index (CPTS-RI) to discover if they had post-traumatic stress symptoms. A case control design was used to define which factors were important for the development of post-traumatic stress. Results of a one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), with post-traumatic stress symptom intensity as measured on the CPTS-RI as the dependent variable, revealed a significant difference between the liver transplantation group compared with children who had a chronic life-threatening illness or had undergone a routine surgical operation. A post hoc (Tukey's HSD test) statistical analysis was performed and significance at the .05 level was found between the liver transplantation group and both the chronic illness group and the routine surgical operation group. Our results indicate that the acute life-threat involved in the liver transplantation contributed to the development of post-traumatic stress. It was thought that dissociation may be important in preventing the resolution of the trauma. Additional investigations are needed with larger numbers in a longitudinal study beginning before the transplant to determine the course of the PTSD symptoms and the appropriate timing of interventions to reduce the harmful effects of these symptoms.

4 Article Psychological responses in family members after the Hebron massacre. 1999

Elbedour S, Baker A, Shalhoub-Kevorkian N, Irwin M, Belmaker RH. · Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Beersheva, Israel. · Depress Anxiety. · Pubmed #9989347 No free full text.

Abstract: The authors attempted to determine the frequency of severe psychological responses in surviving family members in a religious Muslim culture. Twenty-three wives, twelve daughters and twenty-six sons of heads of households massacred while praying in the Hebron mosque on 25 February 1994 were interviewed with the clinician-administered PTSD scale; 50% of daughters, 39% of wives, and 23% of sons met criteria for PTSD. PTSD or traumatic bereavement occurs with high frequency after a major tragedy in a Moslem society, despite religious admiration of dead martyrs.

5 Minor ECT was never used indiscriminately in early treatment of shell shock. free! 1999

Baker A. · No affiliation provided · BMJ. · Pubmed #10213749 links to  free full text

This publication has no abstract.