Anxiety Disorders: Doss AJ

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "Anxiety Disorders," originating from Planet Earth —» Doss AJ.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Review Youth psychotherapy outcome research: a review and critique of the evidence base. 2005

Weisz JR, Doss AJ, Hawley KM. · Judge Baker Children's Center, Harvard University, Boston, MA 02120-3225, USA. · Annu Rev Psychol. · Pubmed #15709939 No free full text.

Abstract: Over the past four decades, researchers have produced extensive evidence on psychotherapy for youth mental health problems and disorders. The evidence often has been evaluated through narrative reviews and through meta-analyses assessing the magnitude of treatment effects, but methodological analysis addressing the character and quality of the evidence base itself is an important complement, needed to place treatment effects in perspective and to suggest directions for future research. We carried out such an analysis, focusing on all the methodologically acceptable published randomized trials our search identified involving treatment of anxiety, depression, ADHD and related conditions, and conduct-related problems and disorders. The 236 studies tested 383 treatments and included 427 treatment-control comparisons, spanning the years 1962 through 2002. The analysis revealed considerable breadth, diversity, and rigor in the measurement approaches used to assess participant characteristics and treatment outcomes. However, reporting on important sample characteristics (e.g., ethnicity) showed major gaps, and more than half the studies failed to use well-standardized procedures to ensure appropriate sample selection. Because sample sizes left most studies underpowered, and procedures to enhance treatment fidelity were generally weak, many of the treatments investigated may not have received fair tests. Studies were particularly weak in clinical representativeness of their samples, therapists, and settings, suggesting a need for increased emphasis on external validity in youth treatment research.

2 Review Empirically tested psychotherapies for youth internalizing and externalizing problems and disorders. 2004

Weisz JR, Hawley KM, Doss AJ. · Department of Psychology, University of California-Los Angeles, Franz Hall, 405 Hilgard Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1563, USA. · Child Adolesc Psychiatr Clin N Am. · Pubmed #15380784 No free full text.

Abstract: This article is a review of specific psychotherapies that have been supported in clinical trials. Treatments that showed significant effects in studies published over a period of 4 decades were identified, with the goal of complementing the overall picture of treatment benefit provided in narrative reviews and meta-analyses with a detailing of the specific interventions that have shown significant effects. The article focuses on treatments for four broad clusters of problems and disorders that account for a very large proportion of youth mental health referrals: anxiety, depression, attention-deficit/hyperactivity, and conduct.