E
Elizabeth T. Ryan
Researcher at Ohio State University
Publications - 16
Citations - 343
Elizabeth T. Ryan is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognitive therapy & Craving. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 16 publications receiving 305 citations. Previous affiliations of Elizabeth T. Ryan include Harvard University & McLean Hospital.
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Incidence and patterns of polydrug use and craving for ecstasy in regular ecstasy users: an ecological momentary assessment study.
James W. Hopper,Zhaohui Su,Alison Looby,Elizabeth T. Ryan,David M. Penetar,Christopher Palmer,Scott E. Lukas +6 more
TL;DR: Though low overall, craving for ecstasy increased over 24 h before use and was higher on Friday nights of weeks ecstasy was used on weekends than weeks it was not used, and use of other drugs on nights involving ecstasy use may simply reflect a "natural history" of drug-use nights that begins with alcohol, progresses to more intoxicating drugs, and ends with little drug use.
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The process of change in cognitive therapy for depression when combined with antidepressant medication: Predictors of early intersession symptom gains.
TL;DR: The findings highlight the utility of Behavioral Methods/Homework in combined treatment for promoting early session-to-session symptom change in cognitive therapy for depression.
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Comparison among plasma, serum, and whole blood ethanol concentrations: impact of storage conditions and collection tubes.
TL;DR: This study shows that blood samples containing ethanol at levels ranging from 60 to 90 mg/dL (0.06 to 0.09 mg%) are not significantly altered by the type of collection tube used or storage condition during a 10-day period.
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Bupropion Reduces some of the symptoms of Marihuana Withdrawal in chronic Marihuana Users: A pilot study
David M. Penetar,Alison Looby,Elizabeth T. Ryan,Melissa A. Maywalt,Scott E. Lukas,Scott E. Lukas +5 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that bupropion may be useful for alleviating marihuana withdrawal symptoms and be useful in subject retention during long-term cessation programs.
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The Therapeutic Alliance and Therapist Adherence as Predictors of Dropout from Cognitive Therapy for Depression when Combined with Antidepressant Medication
Andrew A. Cooper,Daniel R. Strunk,Elizabeth T. Ryan,Robert J. DeRubeis,Steven D. Hollon,Robert Gallop +5 more
TL;DR: Results are consistent with the possibility that the therapeutic alliance and therapists' focus on homework and behavioral methods promote treatment retention in combined treatment for depression.