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David Shapiro

Researcher at Pennsylvania State University

Publications -  151
Citations -  6703

David Shapiro is an academic researcher from Pennsylvania State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fertility & Population. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 145 publications receiving 6528 citations. Previous affiliations of David Shapiro include Ohio State University.

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Effects of treatment duration and severity of depression on the effectiveness of cognitive-behavioral and psychodynamic-interpersonal psychotherapy.

TL;DR: There was no overall advantage to 16- session treatment over 8-session treatment, however, those presenting with relatively severe depression improved substantially more after 16 than after 8 sessions, and there was evidence of some advantage to CB on the Beck Depression Inventory.
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Minor psychiatric disorder in NHS Trust staff::Occupational and gender differences

TL;DR: Female doctors and managers showed a much higher prevalence of minor psychiatric disorder than their male colleagues, and studies are required to establish the organisational, occupational and individual determinants ofMinor psychiatric disorder among NHS employees.
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Team working and effectiveness in health care

TL;DR: Preliminary findings from a major survey of multidisciplinary team working and effectiveness in primary, secondary and community health care teams are presented.
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Patterns of alliance development and the rupture-repair hypothesis: Are productive relationships U-shaped or V-shaped?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors attempted to replicate and extend D M Kivlighan and P Shaughnessy's findings of (a) 3 distinctive patterns of alliance development across sessions and (b) a differential association of one of these, a U-shaped quadratic growth pattern, with positive treatment outcome.
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Early sudden gains in psychotherapy under routine clinic conditions: practice-based evidence.

TL;DR: Sudden gains--large, enduring reductions in symptom intensity from one session to the next--were identified by T. Z. Tang and R. J. DeRubeis (1999b) and the authors found similar sudden gains among clients with a variety of disorders treated with a range of approaches in routine clinic settings.