L
Lisa Young
Researcher at St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton
Publications - 7
Citations - 358
Lisa Young is an academic researcher from St. Joseph's Healthcare Hamilton. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anxiety & Anxiety disorder. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications receiving 320 citations. Previous affiliations of Lisa Young include McMaster University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Smoking behaviors across anxiety disorders.
Randi E. McCabe,Susan Chudzik,Martin M. Antony,Lisa Young,Richard P. Swinson,Michael J Zolvensky +5 more
TL;DR: Findings provide support for Zvolensky et al.'s theoretical conceptualization and suggest a specific link between smoking and panic disorder and suggest differences in anxiety sensitivity between smokers and nonsmokers approached significance.
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The relationship between anxiety disorders in adults and recalled childhood teasing.
TL;DR: Results support and extend previous findings linking childhood teasing to anxiety disorders in adulthood and extend the relationship between experiences of teasing and more global psychological well-being.
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Emotional distress tolerance across anxiety disorders.
TL;DR: Results showed that poor EDT was common across diagnostic groups, and correlation and regression analyses suggested that although EDT was associated with symptom severity and impairment, it did not account for unique variance in scores beyond the effect of negative affect, stress, intolerance of uncertainty and anxiety sensitivity.
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Changes in Beliefs about the Social Competence of Self and Others Following Group Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment
TL;DR: Turner et al. as mentioned in this paper examined changes in social anxiety thoughts and beliefs following cognitive-behavioral treatment (CBT) and found significant decreases from pretreatment to post-treatment in the social anxiety symptoms and in symptoms of depression, nonspecific anxiety and tension.
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Office-based vs home-based behavioral treatment for obsessive-compulsive disorder: a preliminary study.
Karen Rowa,Martin M. Antony,Martin M. Antony,Martin M. Antony,Laura J. Summerfeldt,Laura J. Summerfeldt,Laura J. Summerfeldt,Christine Purdon,Christine Purdon,Christine Purdon,Lisa Young,Lisa Young,Richard P. Swinson,Richard P. Swinson +13 more
TL;DR: Results suggested that participants improved significantly, regardless of where treatment occurred, when administered in a participant's home or other natural environments where symptoms tend to occur, than in a therapist's office.