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Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change

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TLDR
The NIMH Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program: Where We Began and Where We Are (I. Elkin, et al. as discussed by the authors ) presents a methodology, design, and evaluation in psychotherapy research.
Abstract
Methodology, Design, and Evaluation in Psychotherapy Research (A. Kazdin). Assessing Psychotherapy Outcomes and Processes (M. Lambert & C. Hill). The NIMH Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program: Where We Began and Where We Are (I. Elkin). The Effectiveness of Psychotherapy (M. Lambert & A. Bergin). Research on Client Variables in Psychotherapy (S. Garfield). Therapist Variables (L. Beutler, et al.). Process and Outcome in PsychotherapyNoch Einmal (D. Orlinsky, et al.). Behavior Therapy with Adults (P. Emmelkamp). Cognitive and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapies (S. Hollon & A. Beck). Psychodynamic Approaches (W. Henry, et al.). Research on Experiential Psychotherapies (L. Greenberg, et al.). Psychotherapy for Children and Adolescents (A. Kazdin). The Process and Outcome of Marital and Family Therapy: Reseach Review and Evaluation (J. Alexander, et al.). Experiential Group Research (R. Bednar & T. Kaul). Research on Brief Psychotherapy (M. Koss & J. Shiang). Behavioral Medicine and Health Psychology (E. Blanchard). Medication and Psychotherapy (G. Klerman, et al.). Research on Psychotherapy with Culturally Diverse Populations (S. Sue, et al.). Overview, Trends, and Future Issues (A. Bergin & S. Garfield). Indexes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Relations of the alliance with psychotherapy outcome: findings in the Second Sheffield Psychotherapy Project

TL;DR: Some aspects of the alliance as measured by the ARM were correlated with clients' gains in treatment and the strength of the association varied across assessment measures, occasions of outcome assessment, ARM scales, and the session number when the alliance was measured.
Journal ArticleDOI

An investigation of systemic conceptualizations of parent-child coalitions and symptom change

TL;DR: In this article, two important theoretical assumptions of family therapy were examined: (a) child behavior problems are associated with cross-generational coalitions, and (b) treatment of these coalitions using family therapy leads to decreases in individual symptomatology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk factors for dropping out of treatment among White and Black families.

TL;DR: The authors examined factors that predicted dropping out of treatment among white and black children (N = 279, ages 3-13) and among families attending outpatient treatment for externalizing problems, and found that Black families were at greater risk and that several group-specific and common factors can be identified that increase risk.