S
Sara J. Landes
Researcher at University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Publications - 75
Citations - 1847
Sara J. Landes is an academic researcher from University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dialectical behavior therapy & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 62 publications receiving 1295 citations. Previous affiliations of Sara J. Landes include United States Department of Veterans Affairs & VA Palo Alto Healthcare System.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Dialectical Behavior Therapy Is Effective for the Treatment of Suicidal Behavior: A Meta-Analysis
TL;DR: Findings in this paper synthesizes findings from controlled trials that assessed self-directed violence and suicidality, including suicide attempts, non-suicidal self-injury, NSSI, suicidal ideation, and accessing psychiatric crisis services, to reflect the prioritization of behavior over thoughts within DBT.
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Collaborative assessment and management of suicidality (CAMS): feasibility trial for next-day appointment services.
Katherine Anne Comtois,Katherine Anne Comtois,David A. Jobes,Stephen S. O'Connor,David C. Atkins,Karin Janis,Chloe E. Chessen,Sara J. Landes,Sara J. Landes,Anna Holen,Christine Yuodelis-Flores +10 more
TL;DR: Examination of the feasibility and use of a new intervention called CAMS within a “Next‐Day Appointment” (NDA) outpatient treatment setting found it was both feasible in this NDA setting and effective in treating suicidal ideation, distress, and hopelessness (particularly at 12 months followup).
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The nature of clinical depression: Symptoms, syndromes, and behavior analysis
TL;DR: The traditional model of depression is presented and it is suggested that it does not capture the complexity of the phenomenon, nor do syndromal models of depression that dominate the mainstream conceptualization of depression.
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An introduction to effectiveness-implementation hybrid designs.
TL;DR: This paper provides an introduction to hybrid effectiveness-implementation designs and describes each of the three types, design considerations, and examples for each.
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A Review of Studies on the System-Wide Implementation of Evidence-Based Psychotherapies for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in the Veterans Health Administration
Craig S. Rosen,Craig S. Rosen,Monica M. Matthieu,S. Wiltsey Stirman,S. Wiltsey Stirman,Joan M. Cook,Sara J. Landes,Nancy C. Bernardy,Nancy C. Bernardy,Kathleen M. Chard,Kathleen M. Chard,Jill J. Crowley,Afsoon Eftekhari,Erin P. Finley,Jessica L. Hamblen,Jessica L. Hamblen,Juliette M. Harik,Shannon M. Kehle-Forbes,Laura A. Meis,Princess E. Osei-Bonsu,Allison L. Rodriguez,Kenneth J. Ruggiero,Kenneth J. Ruggiero,Josef I. Ruzek,Josef I. Ruzek,Josef I. Ruzek,Brandy N. Smith,Lindsay R. Trent,Lindsay R. Trent,Bradley V. Watts,Bradley V. Watts +30 more
TL;DR: Key areas of progress in implementation are highlighted, continuing challenges and research questions are identified, and implications for future efforts to promote EBPs in large health care systems are discussed.