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Robert Gallop

Researcher at West Chester University of Pennsylvania

Publications -  266
Citations -  20875

Robert Gallop is an academic researcher from West Chester University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Cognitive therapy. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 244 publications receiving 18743 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert Gallop include University of Ottawa & University of Pennsylvania.

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Comprehensive Screening for Suicide Risk in Primary Care

TL;DR: Risk behaviors and social stress contribute to the risk for suicide above and beyond depression and should be assessed during routine primary care visits with adolescents, according to this study.
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High psychiatric symptom severity is a moderator of substance abuse treatment outcomes among women in single vs. mixed gender group treatment.

TL;DR: Single-gender group treatment may confer added benefit for women with substance abuse and high psychiatric symptom severity than mixed-gender treatment.
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Distribution-free models for longitudinal count responses with overdispersion and structural zeros.

TL;DR: A distribution-free modeling approach is proposed to address the limitations of these methods by utilizing a new class of functional response models to deal with overdispersion and structural zeros within a longitudinal data setting.
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Sequence of improvement in depressive symptoms across cognitive therapy and pharmacotherapy.

TL;DR: Multivariate hierarchical linear modeling demonstrated the same patterns of change over time for cognitive and vegetative symptoms within CT and within PT, consistent with Beck's hypothesis that CT and PT have a similar site of action, which when targeted, results in changes in both cognitive and Vegetative features.
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Do supervisors and independent judges agree on evaluations of therapist adherence and competence in the treatment of cocaine dependence

TL;DR: The agreement between supervisors' and independent judges' evaluations of therapist adherence and competence in three treatments of cocaine dependence: supportive expressive therapy, cognitive therapy CT, and individual drug counseling was weak.