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Cognitive-behavioral therapy efficacy via videoconferencing for social (public speaking) anxiety disorder : a single case designPelletier, Marie-Helene 11 1900 (has links)
Social (public speaking) anxiety disorder is the most prevalent of all anxiety
disorders, and it often impairs social and occupational functioning. Intervention studies
indicate that cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is an efficacious treatment for social
anxiety. However, access to therapists skilled in CBT for social anxiety is often difficult.
In order to respond to the problem of access, the use of videoconferencing for mental
health care has developed. No published study has investigated the efficacy of CBT for
social anxiety when provided via videoconferencing.
The purpose of this study, therefore, was to determine the efficacy of CBT for
social anxiety when provided via videoconferencing. A single-case replication design
was employed that included a baseline period of 3 weeks, followed by 12 weeks of .
treatment, 1-week post-intervention period, and 3-month follow-up. Five participants
completed treatment. It was hypothesized that participants would reduce their social
anxiety symptoms (i.e., decrease anxiety during speech task, increase duration of speech
task, and decrease public speaking anxiety) assessed on standardized measures of social
anxiety. Exploratory analyses of changes in self-monitored social anxiety, negative
cognitions (public self-consciousness, fear of negative evaluation, internal attributions),
working alliance, client satisfaction with treatment, and client comfort with
videoconferencing were also performed. Analyses included visual and statistical
significance, as well as clinical significance (i.e., endstate functioning, social phobia
diagnostic status).
The results indicated that two of three hypotheses were supported (i.e., anxiety
during speech task reduced and duration of speech task increased over time). At 3-month
follow-up, treatment gains were maintained or improved further; 3 participants no longer
met the DSM-IV-TR criteria for social anxiety disorder, and 4 participants met criteria
for moderate or high level of endstate functioning (i.e., clinical significance). Exploratory
analyses revealed that self-monitored social anxiety decreased for 3 of 5 participants, and
that a decrease in negative cognitions was associated with a decrease in social anxiety.
Working alliance ratings remained high throughout treatment. Satisfaction with
videoconferencing decreased over treatment for the participant who did not improve.
Generally, comfort with videoconferencing increased over time. The results offer
preliminary support for further research about the efficacy of the intervention.
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Cognitive-behavioral therapy efficacy via videoconferencing for social (public speaking) anxiety disorder : a single case designPelletier, Marie-Helene 11 1900 (has links)
Social (public speaking) anxiety disorder is the most prevalent of all anxiety
disorders, and it often impairs social and occupational functioning. Intervention studies
indicate that cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is an efficacious treatment for social
anxiety. However, access to therapists skilled in CBT for social anxiety is often difficult.
In order to respond to the problem of access, the use of videoconferencing for mental
health care has developed. No published study has investigated the efficacy of CBT for
social anxiety when provided via videoconferencing.
The purpose of this study, therefore, was to determine the efficacy of CBT for
social anxiety when provided via videoconferencing. A single-case replication design
was employed that included a baseline period of 3 weeks, followed by 12 weeks of .
treatment, 1-week post-intervention period, and 3-month follow-up. Five participants
completed treatment. It was hypothesized that participants would reduce their social
anxiety symptoms (i.e., decrease anxiety during speech task, increase duration of speech
task, and decrease public speaking anxiety) assessed on standardized measures of social
anxiety. Exploratory analyses of changes in self-monitored social anxiety, negative
cognitions (public self-consciousness, fear of negative evaluation, internal attributions),
working alliance, client satisfaction with treatment, and client comfort with
videoconferencing were also performed. Analyses included visual and statistical
significance, as well as clinical significance (i.e., endstate functioning, social phobia
diagnostic status).
The results indicated that two of three hypotheses were supported (i.e., anxiety
during speech task reduced and duration of speech task increased over time). At 3-month
follow-up, treatment gains were maintained or improved further; 3 participants no longer
met the DSM-IV-TR criteria for social anxiety disorder, and 4 participants met criteria
for moderate or high level of endstate functioning (i.e., clinical significance). Exploratory
analyses revealed that self-monitored social anxiety decreased for 3 of 5 participants, and
that a decrease in negative cognitions was associated with a decrease in social anxiety.
Working alliance ratings remained high throughout treatment. Satisfaction with
videoconferencing decreased over treatment for the participant who did not improve.
Generally, comfort with videoconferencing increased over time. The results offer
preliminary support for further research about the efficacy of the intervention. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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Widening the lens: An interdisciplinary approach to examining the effect of exposure therapy on public speaking state anxiety.Finn, Amber N. 08 1900 (has links)
This study used an interdisciplinary approach to examine an intervention for reducing public speaking state anxiety. A quasi-experiment was conducted to determine if a multiple-exposure treatment technique (TRIPLESPEAK) would help to attenuate public speaking anxiety. The treatment group reported experiencing significantly less state anxiety during their post-test presentation than did the control group. This lead to the conclusion that exposure therapy can be used to help students enrolled in basic communication classes begin to overcome their fear of speaking in front of an audience. Follow-up analysis of the treatment group's reported anxiety levels during all five presentations (pre-test, Treatment Presentation 1, Treatment Presentation 2, Treatment Presentation 3, and post-test) revealed an increase in anxiety from the last treatment presentation to the post-test presentation. In order to explore this issue, Shannon's entropy was utilized to calculate the amount of information in each speaking environment. Anderson's functional ontology construction approach served as a model to explain the role of the environment in shaping speakers' current and future behaviors and reports of anxiety. The exploratory analysis revealed a functional relationship between information and anxiety. In addition, a qualitative study was conducted to determine which environmental stimuli speakers perceived contributed to their anxiety levels. Students reported experiencing anxiety based on four categories, which included speaker concerns, audience characteristics, contextual factors and assignment criteria. Students' reports of anxiety were dependent upon their previous speaking experiences, and students suggested differences existed between the traditional presentations and the treatment presentations. Pedagogical and theoretical implications are discussed.
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