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Stuart M. Sotsky

Researcher at George Washington University

Publications -  25
Citations -  7126

Stuart M. Sotsky is an academic researcher from George Washington University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Interpersonal psychotherapy & Major depressive disorder. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 25 publications receiving 6993 citations.

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National Institute of Mental Health Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program. General effectiveness of treatments.

TL;DR: There was limited evidence of the specific effectiveness of interpersonal psychotherapy and none for cognitive behavior therapy, but Superior recovery rates were found for both interpersonal Psychotherapy and imipramine plusclinical management, as compared with placebo plus clinical management.
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The role of the therapeutic alliance in psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy outcome: Findings in the National Institute of Mental Health Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program.

TL;DR: Therapeutic alliance was found to have a significant effect on clinical outcome for both psychotherapies and for active and placebo pharmacotherapy, and ratings of therapist contribution to the alliance and outcome were not significantly linked.
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Some conceptual and statistical issues in analysis of longitudinal psychiatric data. Application to the NIMH treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program dataset.

TL;DR: A family of statistical models termed random regression models were used that provide a more realistic approach to analysis of longitudinal psychiatric data and indicated that both person-specific effects and serial correlation play major roles in the longitudinal psychiatric response process.
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Personality disorders and treatment outcome in the NIMH Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program.

TL;DR: Patients with personality disorders had a significantly worse outcome in social functioning and were significantly more likely to have residual symptoms of depression and there were no significant differences in work functioning or in mean depression scores at treatment termination.