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Journal ArticleDOI

Reduced therapist contact in the cognitive behavioral treatment of panic disorder

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors compared the effectiveness of two cognitive behavioral therapy programs for panic disorder: one involved reduced therapist contact; the other was entirely therapist directed, and found that both treatment procedures produced significant and comparable improvements on all the outcome measures that were maintained or furthered at follow-ups.
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This article is published in Behavior Therapy.The article was published on 1994-12-01. It has received 68 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Panic disorder & Panic.

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Citations
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A multidimensional meta-analysis of treatments for depression, panic, and generalized anxiety disorder: An empirical examination of the status of empirically supported therapies.

TL;DR: A meta-analysis of high-quality studies published from 1990-1998 on the efficacy of manualized psychotherapies for depression, panic disorder, and generalized anxiety disorder suggests that a substantial proportion of patients with panic improve and remain improved.
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Efficacy of internet therapy for panic disorder.

TL;DR: Internet treatment was more effective than CBT manual in reducing clinician-rated agoraphobia and number of GP visits at post-assessment and at follow-up, with internet CBT better at improving physical health ratings and reducing GP visits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Empirically supported treatments for panic disorder: costs, benefits, and stepped care.

TL;DR: Estimates of the relative efficacy, acceptability, tolerability, and costs of these treatments are reviewed; empirically examine the costs and outcome of cognitive-behavioral and pharmacologic interventions as they are delivered in an outpatient clinic specializing in these treatments; and comment on how these data inform a stepped care model of treatment.
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Advances in the Psychosocial Treatment of Anxiety Disorders: Implications for National Health Care

TL;DR: The first generation of multisite studies examining the potentially synergistic effects of proven psychosocial treatments and proven drug treatments are examined, with some preliminary results reported.

Clinical Handbook Of Psychological Disorders

TL;DR: The Clinical Handbook of Psychological Disorders: A Step-by-Step Treatment Manual, Fifth Edition, is a valuable reference to help bridge this gap and is provided in this piece.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Is agoraphobia a variant of panic disorder or a separate illness

TL;DR: Patients with panic disorder attending an anxiety clinic were separated into three groups according to the extent of phobic avoidance and then compared with respect to clinical and demographic features, indicating that patients without agoraphobic symptoms have a less severe form of the illness.
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Assessment of agoraphobia--II. Measurement of clinical change.

TL;DR: The limitations of physiological measurement for treatment outcome purposes are discussed, and suggestions are offered for effective utilization of triple response measurement for agoraphobia research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Behavior therapy for panic disorder.

TL;DR: Ten of 11 patients who met DSM-III criteria for panic disorder were treated with behavior therapy techniques and six of seven mixed phobics showed complete remission or significant improvement of phobias.
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Self-help manual for agoraphobia: A preliminary report of effectiveness

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the efficacy of a self-treatment manual for agoraphobia using a multiple baseline across subjects design and found that the self-help manual was not effective.
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The present findings suggest that cognitive behavior therapy with reduced therapist contact may be a viable, therapist-time-efficient alternative for the treatment of panic disorder.