J
John C. Markowitz
Researcher at Columbia University
Publications - 272
Citations - 18807
John C. Markowitz is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Interpersonal psychotherapy & Personality disorders. The author has an hindex of 61, co-authored 250 publications receiving 17120 citations. Previous affiliations of John C. Markowitz include NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital & University of York.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The 16-Item Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS), clinician rating (QIDS-C), and self-report (QIDS-SR): a psychometric evaluation in patients with chronic major depression.
A. John Rush,Madhukar H. Trivedi,Hicham M. Ibrahim,Thomas J. Carmody,Bruce A. Arnow,Daniel N. Klein,John C. Markowitz,Philip T. Ninan,Susan G. Kornstein,Rachel Manber,Michael E. Thase,James H. Kocsis,Martin B. Keller +12 more
TL;DR: The QIDS-SR(16) has highly acceptable psychometric properties, which supports the usefulness of this brief rating of depressive symptom severity in both clinical and research settings.
PRACTICE GUIDELINE FOR THE Treatment of Patients With Major Depressive Disorder
Journal ArticleDOI
A comparison of nefazodone, the cognitive behavioral-analysis system of psychotherapy, and their combination for the treatment of chronic depression.
Martin B. Keller,James P. McCullough,Daniel N. Klein,Bruce A. Arnow,David L. Dunner,Alan J. Gelenberg,John C. Markowitz,Charles B. Nemeroff,James M. Russell,Michael E. Thase,Madhukar H. Trivedi,John Zajecka +11 more
TL;DR: Although about half of patients with chronic forms of major depression have a response to short-term treatment with either nefazodone or a cognitive behavioral-analysis system of psychotherapy, the combination of the two is significantly more efficacious than either treatment alone.
Book
Comprehensive Guide To Interpersonal Psychotherapy
TL;DR: In this paper, an encyclopedic reference consolidating the 1984 manual with new applications and research results plus studies in process and in promise and an international resource exchange is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ten-Year Course of Borderline Personality Disorder: Psychopathology and Function From the Collaborative Longitudinal Personality Disorders Study
John G. Gunderson,Robert L. Stout,Thomas H. McGlashan,M. Tracie Shea,M. Tracie Shea,Leslie C. Morey,Carlos M. Grilo,Mary C. Zanarini,Shirley Yen,John C. Markowitz,Charles A. Sanislow,Emily B. Ansell,Anthony Pinto,Andrew E. Skodol,Andrew E. Skodol +14 more
TL;DR: The 10-year course of BPD is characterized by high rates of remission, low rates of relapse, and severe and persistent impairment in social functioning, informing expectations of patients, families, and clinicians and document the severe public health burden of this disorder.