P
Paula R. Young
Researcher at Rush University
Publications - 7
Citations - 1774
Paula R. Young is an academic researcher from Rush University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications receiving 1668 citations. Previous affiliations of Paula R. Young include University of Pennsylvania.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cognitive therapy vs medications in the treatment of moderate to severe depression.
Robert J. DeRubeis,Steven D. Hollon,Jay D. Amsterdam,Richard C. Shelton,Paula R. Young,Ronald M. Salomon,John P. O'Reardon,Margaret L. Lovett,Madeline M. Gladis,Laurel L. Brown,Robert Gallop +10 more
TL;DR: Cognitive therapy can be as effective as medications for the initial treatment of moderate to severe major depression, but this degree of effectiveness may depend on a high level of therapist experience or expertise.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prevention of relapse following cognitive therapy vs medications in moderate to severe depression.
Steven D. Hollon,Robert J. DeRubeis,Richard C. Shelton,Jay D. Amsterdam,Ronald M. Salomon,John P. O'Reardon,Margaret L. Lovett,Paula R. Young,Kirsten L. Haman,Brent B. Freeman,Robert Gallop +10 more
TL;DR: Cognitive therapy has an enduring effect that extends beyond the end of treatment and seems to be as effective as keeping patients on medication.
Journal ArticleDOI
Effect of Cognitive Therapy With Antidepressant Medications vs Antidepressants Alone on the Rate of Recovery in Major Depressive Disorder: A Randomized Clinical Trial
Steven D. Hollon,Robert J. DeRubeis,Jan Fawcett,Jay D. Amsterdam,Richard C. Shelton,John Zajecka,Paula R. Young,Robert Gallop +7 more
TL;DR: Cognitive therapy combined with ADM treatment enhances the rates of recovery from MDD relative to ADMs alone, with the effect limited to patients with severe, nonchronic depression.
Journal ArticleDOI
Prevention of Recurrence After Recovery From a Major Depressive Episode With Antidepressant Medication Alone or in Combination With Cognitive Behavioral Therapy: Phase 2 of a 2-Phase Randomized Clinical Trial
Robert J. DeRubeis,John Zajecka,Richard C. Shelton,Richard C. Shelton,Jay D. Amsterdam,Jan Fawcett,Colin Xu,Paula R. Young,Robert Gallop,Steven D. Hollon +9 more
TL;DR: In this study, maintenance monotherapy was associated with reduced rates of depressive recurrence and when CBT was provided in the absence of monotherapy treatment, a preventive effect on depressive relapse was noted.
Journal ArticleDOI
Some lessons from group supervision of cognitive therapy for depression
TL;DR: In this article, the same questions and topics that have been asked most frequently during several years of group supervision led by the third author have been discussed, such as the specifics of the agenda, special uses of language, the pacing of therapy, and therapeutic alliance.