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Juan Martín Gómez Penedo

Researcher at University of Buenos Aires

Publications -  62
Citations -  437

Juan Martín Gómez Penedo is an academic researcher from University of Buenos Aires. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chronic pain. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 45 publications receiving 243 citations. Previous affiliations of Juan Martín Gómez Penedo include University of Belgrano & University of Trier.

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The Working Alliance Inventory for guided Internet interventions (WAI-I).

TL;DR: The WAI-I showed as a reliable and valid instrument to capture alliance in guided Internet interventions, which might facilitate process-outcome research and treatment development efforts.
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The Complex Interplay of Pain, Depression, and Anxiety Symptoms in Patients with Chronic Pain

TL;DR: The results support focusing psychosocial interventions in chronic pain treatment not only on reducing pain, anxiety, and sleep symptoms but also on enhancing positive affect.
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Markers for context-responsiveness: Client baseline interpersonal problems moderate the efficacy of two psychotherapies for generalized anxiety disorder.

TL;DR: GAD-specific interpersonal problems can serve as contextual markers for integrative treatment selection and planning and help clarify the role of theory-relevant problems as moderators of the comparative treatment effects on outcome.
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A qualitative investigation of former clients' perception of change, reasons for consultation, therapeutic relationship, and termination.

TL;DR: Results show how the balance of negative and positive aspects of the therapeutic relationship is associated with the perception of change, and categories related to reasons for consultation were associated with types of change and therapy termination.
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Impact of attachment behavior on the treatment process of chronic pain patients.

TL;DR: The results of this study indicate that insecurely attached patients with pain symptoms only benefit from a multimodal pain therapy in limited ways in regard to posttreatment trajectories, and suggest the importance of direct and indirect mechanisms of attachment.