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The present and future of clinical psychology in GermanyHoyer, Jürgen, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich January 2001 (has links)
Introduction: This paper does not aim to predict the future of clinical psychology in Germany. The future of psychology depends on the complex interaction between political, sociological, economic and health-care related factors as well as on the scientific progress in the discipline itself and in neighbour disciplines. However, it is fair to say that clinical psychology continues to gain even stronger influences in health care and will face a number of new challenges over the next years of its expansion.
Our paper will present some of these potential fields of development and change based on a brief description of the status quo. The focus of the article will be specific developments in Germany, although there will be an overlap with general tendencies that describe the situation of clinical psychology in the new millenium in general. Furthermore, for research as well as practice, the specific relationship between clinical psychology and psyciatry will be highlighted.
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Effect of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy on Neural Correlates of Fear Conditioning in Panic DisorderKircher, Tilo, Arolt, Volker, Jansen, Andreas, Pyka, Martin, Reinhardt, Isabelle, Kellermann, Thilo, Konrad, Carsten, Lüken, Ulrike, Gloster, Andrew T., Gerlach, Alexander L., Ströhle, Andreas, Wittmann, André, Pfleiderer, Bettina, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich, Straube, Benjamin January 2013 (has links)
Background: Learning by conditioning is a key ability of animals and humans for acquiring novel behavior necessary for survival in a changing environment. Aberrant conditioning has been considered a crucial factor in the etiology and maintenance of panic disorder with agoraphobia (PD/A). Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is an effective treatment for PD/A. However, the neural mechanisms underlying the effects of CBT on conditioning processes in PD/A are unknown.
Methods: In a randomized, controlled, multicenter clinical trial in medication-free patients with PD/A who were treated with 12 sessions of manualized CBT, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used during fear conditioning before and after CBT. Quality-controlled fMRI data from 42 patients and 42 healthy subjects were obtained.
Results: After CBT, patients compared to control subjects revealed reduced activation for the conditioned response (CS+ > CS–) in the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG). This activation reduction was correlated with reduction in agoraphobic symptoms from t1 to t2. Patients compared to control subjects also demonstrated increased connectivity between the IFG and regions of the “fear network” (amygdalae, insulae, anterior cingulate cortex) across time.
Conclusions: This study demonstrates the link between cerebral correlates of cognitive (IFG) and emotional (“fear network”) processing during symptom improvement across time in PD/A. Further research along this line has promising potential to support the development and further optimization of targeted treatments.
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Erythrophobie: Störungswissen und VerhaltenstherapieChaker, Samia, Hoyer, Jürgen January 2007 (has links)
Erythrophobie wird als klinische Bezeichnung für die Angst zu erröten verwendet, wenn das Einzelsymptom Erröten im Vordergrund einer Angstproblematik steht. Die vorliegende Übersicht beruht auf einer umfangreichen Literaturrecherche und wird ergänzt durch eigene klinische Beobachtungen aus einer Pilotstudie zur kognitiv-behavioralen Gruppentherapie der Errötungsangst. Wir referieren den aktuellen Kenntnisstand zu Erythrophobie in Bezug auf die differentialdiagnostische Einordnung, auf ätiologische und pathogenetische Konzepte sowie auf die Verhaltenstherapie der Störung. Insgesamt zeigt die Übersicht, dass Erythrophobie am sinnvollsten als Subsyndrom der Sozialen Phobie beschrieben werden kann. Patienten mit Errötungsangst als Hauptbeschwerde unterscheiden sich jedoch von anderen Patienten mit Sozialer Phobie im Hinblick auf Behandlungsanliegen, Inanspruchnahmeverhalten, Behandlungserwartung und Therapieziele sowie durch spezifische aufrechterhaltende Mechanismen der Störung, insbesondere durch eine übertriebene und inflexible Aufmerksamkeitsfokussierung auf körperliche Symptome. Der Einsatz eines Aufmerksamkeitstrainings als spezifisches Behandlungsmodul bei Errötungsangst ist vielversprechend und sollte in bekannte Ansätze zur Therapie der Sozialen Phobie integriert werden. Abschließend werden Impulse für weiterführende Forschungsaktivitäten skizziert. / Erythrophobia is the pathological form of fear of blushing. This review is based upon an extensive literature research and supplemented by clinical observations from a pilot study of a cognitive-behavioural group therapy for fear of blushing. Current knowledge about fear of blushing is reported regarding diagnostic considerations, aetiologic and pathogenetic mechanisms, and cognitive-behavioural therapy. In conclusion, this review indicates that fear of blushing should be classified as a sub-syndrome of social phobia. Patients suffering from fear of blushing as predominant complaint differ from other patients with social phobia in health-care utilisation, treatment expectation and treatment goals. However, the most prominent difference lies in the exaggerated and inflexible self-focused attention these patients direct to their arousal and bodily symptoms. Therefore, attention training as a specific treatment unit is promising and should be integrated in standard treatment approaches for social phobia. Finally, options for further research are outlined. / Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG-geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugänglich.
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Rapid response in psychological treatments for binge-eating disorderHilbert, Anja, Hildebrandt, Thomas, Agras, W. Stewart, Wilfley, Denise E., Wilson, G. Terence 12 April 2017 (has links) (PDF)
Objective: Analysis of short- and long-term effects of rapid response across three different treatments for binge-eating disorder (BED). Method: In a randomized clinical study comparing interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT), cognitive-behavioral guided self-help (CBTgsh), and behavioral weight loss (BWL) treatment in 205 adults meeting DSM-IV criteria for BED, the predictive value of rapid response, defined as ≥ 70% reduction in binge-eating by week four, was determined for remission from binge-eating and global eating disorder psychopathology at posttreatment, 6-, 12-, 18-, and 24-month follow-up. Results: Rapid responders in CBTgsh, but not in IPT or BWL, showed significantly greater rates of remission from binge-eating than non-rapid responders, which was sustained over the long term. Rapid and non-rapid responders in IPT and rapid responders in CBTgsh showed a greater remission from binge-eating than non-rapid responders in CBTgsh and BWL. Rapid responders in CBTgsh showed greater remission from binge-eating than rapid responders in BWL. Although rapid responders in all treatments had lower global eating disorder psychopathology than non-rapid responders in the short term, rapid responders in CBTgsh and IPT were more improved than those in BWL and non-rapid responders in each treatment. Rapid responders in BWL did not differ from non-rapid responders in CBTgsh and IPT. Conclusions: Rapid response is a treatment-specific positive prognostic indicator of sustained remission from binge-eating in CBTgsh. Regarding an evidence-based stepped care model, IPT, equally efficacious for rapid and non-rapid responders, could be investigated as a second-line treatment in case of non-rapid response to first-line CBTgsh.
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Klinische Psychologie und Verhaltenstherapie - zwischen Aufstieg und Erosion / Clinical Psychology and Behavior Therapy - between Rise and ErosionWittchen, Hans-Ulrich 03 December 2012 (has links) (PDF)
Der Beitrag diskutiert Probleme der raschen Weiterentwicklung von Klinischer Psychologie und der Verhaltenstherapie im besonderen. Dabei werden drei Perspektiven angesprochen: (a) Binnenbeziehungen innerhalb des Fachs Klinische Psychologie sowie zu Nachbardisziplinen, (b) Transferprobleme wissen-schaftlicher Erkenntnisse von der Forschung zur Praxis und (c) Probleme der Fort– und Weiterbildung sowie der Qualitätssicherung in der Verhaltenstherapie. Als Beispiele von Fortschritt und Erosion werden diskutiert: (a) die Verhaltensmedizin, als Muster für gut abgestimmte und in die Klinische Psychologie als Fach integrierte Entwicklung, (b) die Gesundheitspsychologie für eine schlechte Interaktionskultur mit mangelhaftem gegen-seitigem Informatiûnstransfer und (c) die Psychotherapieszene als Beispiel für Erosionsprozesse in Forschung, Praxis sowie vor allem Fort– und Weiterbildung. Der Beitrag fordert eine wesentliche Stärkung des Fachs Klinische Psychologie als fachliche und organisatorische Klammer zwischen den auseinanderdriftenden Entwicklungen. Eine erfolgreiche Übernahme dieser universitär verankerten Koordinations- und Integrationsaufgabe erfordert allerdings gleichzeitig auch eine erhebliche Ausweitung personeller Ressourcen und fachlicher Kompetenzen. Eine zentrale neue Herausforderung für klinisch-psychologische Universitätsinstitute besteht auch in der Entwicklung von Qualitätssicherungsmaβnahmen. Der Beitrag empfiehlt in diesem Zusammenhang, vor allem in der Fort– und Weiterbildung den verstärkten Einsatz von Therapiemanualen sowie die Institutionalisierung von regelmäβigen Konsensuskonferenzen mit Empfehlungen zur Therapiedurchführung. / This paper discusses progress and erosion aspects of c1inical psychology and behavior therapy in Germany from three interrelated perspectives: (a) the relationship of behavior therapy and c1inical psychology to other basic and applied psychological disciplines as weIl as neighboring disciplines, (b) the transfer problems from the scientific fields to practice, and (c) the problem of quality assurance in practice and postgraduate education. Specific emphasis is laid on a discussion of the field of behavioral medicine, as an example for well-integrated and coordinated research and practice activities; health psychology as an example for deficient communication patterns with clinical psychology and behavior therapy, and psychotherapy as an example for erosion in research, education and practice. The paper strongly recommends a more dominant steering role of clinical psychology as the most comprehensive scientific discipline. This steering role, however, would also require a considerably expanded infrastructure of clinical psychology departments in universities together with several mechanisms (competence enhancement, consensus conferences, development of postgraduate education guidelines, quality assurance activities, coordination) to be able to fulfill this mission. The paper also suggests the more frequent use of standardized treatment manuals in postgraduate courses.
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Early specific cognitive-behavioural psychotherapy in subjects at high risk for bipolar disorders: study protocol for a randomised controlled trialPfennig, Andrea, Leopold, Karolina, Bechdolf, Andreas, Correll, Christoph U., Holtmann, Martin, Lambert, Martin, Marx, Carolin, Meyer, Thomas D., Pfeiffer, Steffi, Reif, Andreas, Rottmann-Wolf, Maren, Schmitt, Natalie M., Stamm, Thomas, Juckel, Georg, Bauer, Michael 21 July 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Background: Bipolar disorders (BD) are among the most severe mental disorders with first clinical signs and symptoms frequently appearing in adolescence and early adulthood. The long latency in clinical diagnosis (and subsequent adequate treatment) adversely affects the course of disease, effectiveness of interventions and health-related quality of life, and increases the economic burden of BD. Despite uncertainties about risk constellations and symptomatology in the early stages of potentially developing BD, many adolescents and young adults seek help, and most of them suffer substantially from symptoms already leading to impairments in psychosocial functioning in school, training, at work and in their social relationships. We aimed to identify subjects at risk of developing BD and investigate the efficacy and safety of early specific cognitive-behavioural psychotherapy (CBT) in this subpopulation. Methods/Design: EarlyCBT is a randomised controlled multi-centre clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of early specific CBT, including stress management and problem solving strategies, with elements of mindfulness-based therapy (MBT) versus unstructured group meetings for 14 weeks each and follow-up until week 78. Participants are recruited at seven university hospitals throughout Germany, which provide in- and outpatient care (including early recognition centres) for psychiatric patients. Subjects at high risk must be 15 to 30 years old and meet the combination of specified affective symptomatology, reduction of psychosocial functioning, and family history for (schizo)affective disorders. Primary efficacy endpoints are differences in psychosocial functioning and defined affective symptomatology at 14 weeks between groups. Secondary endpoints include the above mentioned endpoints at 7, 24, 52 and 78 weeks and the change within groups compared to baseline; perception of, reaction to and coping with stress; and conversion to full BD. Discussion: To our knowledge, this is the first study to evaluate early specific CBT in subjects at high risk for BD. Structured diagnostic interviews are used to map the risk status and development of disease. With our study, the level of evidence for the treatment of those young patients will be significantly raised.
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Depression Does Not Affect the Treatment Outcome of CBT for Panic and Agoraphobia: Results from a Multicenter Randomized TrialEmmrich, Angela, Beesdo-Baum, Katja, Gloster, Andrew T., Knappe, Susanne, Höfler, Michael, Arolt, Volker, Deckert, Jürgen, Gerlach, Alexander L., Hamm, Alfons, Kircher, Tilo, Lang, Thomas, Richter, Jan, Ströhle, Andreas, Zwanzger, Peter, Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich 13 February 2014 (has links) (PDF)
Background: Controversy surrounds the questions whether co-occurring depression has negative effects on cognitivebehavioral therapy (CBT) outcomes in patients with panic disorder (PD) and agoraphobia (AG) and whether treatment for PD and AG (PD/AG) also reduces depressive symptomatology.
Methods: Post-hoc analyses of randomized clinical trial data of 369 outpatients with primary PD/AG (DSM-IV-TR criteria) treated with a 12-session manualized CBT (n = 301) and a waitlist control group (n = 68). Patients with comorbid depression (DSM-IV-TR major depression, dysthymia, or both: 43.2% CBT, 42.7% controls) were compared to patients without depression regarding anxiety and depression outcomes (Clinical Global Impression Scale [CGI], Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale [HAM-A], number of panic attacks, Mobility Inventory [MI], Panic and Agoraphobia Scale, Beck Depression Inventory) at post-treatment and follow-up (categorical). Further, the role of severity of depressive symptoms on anxiety/depression outcome measures was examined (dimensional).
Results: Comorbid depression did not have a significant overall effect on anxiety outcomes at post-treatment and follow-up, except for slightly diminished post-treatment effect sizes for clinician-rated CGI (p = 0.03) and HAM-A (p = 0.008) when adjusting for baseline anxiety severity. In the dimensional model, higher baseline depression scores were associated with lower effect sizes at post-treatment (except for MI), but not at follow-up (except for HAM-A). Depressive symptoms improved irrespective of the presence of depression.
Conclusions: Exposure-based CBT for primary PD/AG effectively reduces anxiety and depressive symptoms, irrespective of comorbid depression or depressive symptomatology. / Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG-geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugänglich.
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The Social Phobia Psychotherapy Research NetworkLeichsenring, Falk, Hoyer, Jürgen, Beutel, Manfred, Herpertz, Sabine, Hiller, Wolfgang, Irle, Eva, Joraschky, Peter, König, Hans-Helmut, de Liz, Therese Marie, Nolting, Björn, Pöhlmann, Karin, Salzer, Simone, Schauenburg, Henning, Stangier, Ulrich, Strauss, Bernhard, Subic-Wrana, Claudia, Vormfelde, Stefan, Weniger, Godehard, Willutzki, Ulrike, Wiltink, Jörg, Leibing, Eric 13 February 2014 (has links) (PDF)
This paper presents the Social Phobia Psychotherapy Research Network. The research program encompasses a coordinated group of studies adopting a standard protocol and an agreed-on set of standardized measures for the assessment and treatment of social phobia (SP). In the central project (study A), a multicenter randomized controlled trial, refined models of manualized cognitive-behavioral therapy and manualized short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy are compared in the treatment of SP. A sample of 512 outpatients will be randomized to either cognitive-behavioral therapy, short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy or waiting list. Assessments will be made at baseline, at the end of treatment and 6 and 12 months after the end of treatment. For quality assurance and treatment integrity, a specific project using highly elaborated measures has been established (project Q). Study A is complemented by 4 interrelated add-on projects focusing on attachment style (study B1), on cost-effectiveness (study B2), on variation in the serotonin transporter gene in SP (study C1) and on structural and functional deviations of the hippocampus and amygdala (study C2). Thus, the Social Phobia Psychotherapy Research Network program enables a highly interdisciplinary research into SP. The unique sample size achieved by the multicenter approach allows for studies of subgroups (e.g. comorbid disorders, isolated vs. generalized SP), of responders and nonresponders of each treatment approach, for generalization of results and for a sufficient power to detect differences between treatments. Psychological and biological parameters will be related to treatment outcome, and variables for differential treatment indication will be gained. Thus, the results provided by the network may have an important impact on the treatment of SP and on the development of treatment guidelines for SP. / Dieser Beitrag ist mit Zustimmung des Rechteinhabers aufgrund einer (DFG-geförderten) Allianz- bzw. Nationallizenz frei zugänglich.
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Early specific cognitive-behavioural psychotherapy in subjects at high risk for bipolar disorders: study protocol for a randomised controlled trialPfennig, Andrea, Leopold, Karolina, Bechdolf, Andreas, Correll, Christoph U., Holtmann, Martin, Lambert, Martin, Marx, Carolin, Meyer, Thomas D., Pfeiffer, Steffi, Reif, Andreas, Rottmann-Wolf, Maren, Schmitt, Natalie M., Stamm, Thomas, Juckel, Georg, Bauer, Michael 21 July 2014 (has links)
Background: Bipolar disorders (BD) are among the most severe mental disorders with first clinical signs and symptoms frequently appearing in adolescence and early adulthood. The long latency in clinical diagnosis (and subsequent adequate treatment) adversely affects the course of disease, effectiveness of interventions and health-related quality of life, and increases the economic burden of BD. Despite uncertainties about risk constellations and symptomatology in the early stages of potentially developing BD, many adolescents and young adults seek help, and most of them suffer substantially from symptoms already leading to impairments in psychosocial functioning in school, training, at work and in their social relationships. We aimed to identify subjects at risk of developing BD and investigate the efficacy and safety of early specific cognitive-behavioural psychotherapy (CBT) in this subpopulation. Methods/Design: EarlyCBT is a randomised controlled multi-centre clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy and safety of early specific CBT, including stress management and problem solving strategies, with elements of mindfulness-based therapy (MBT) versus unstructured group meetings for 14 weeks each and follow-up until week 78. Participants are recruited at seven university hospitals throughout Germany, which provide in- and outpatient care (including early recognition centres) for psychiatric patients. Subjects at high risk must be 15 to 30 years old and meet the combination of specified affective symptomatology, reduction of psychosocial functioning, and family history for (schizo)affective disorders. Primary efficacy endpoints are differences in psychosocial functioning and defined affective symptomatology at 14 weeks between groups. Secondary endpoints include the above mentioned endpoints at 7, 24, 52 and 78 weeks and the change within groups compared to baseline; perception of, reaction to and coping with stress; and conversion to full BD. Discussion: To our knowledge, this is the first study to evaluate early specific CBT in subjects at high risk for BD. Structured diagnostic interviews are used to map the risk status and development of disease. With our study, the level of evidence for the treatment of those young patients will be significantly raised.
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Therapist adherence in individual cognitive-behavioral therapy for binge-eating disorder: assessment, course, and predictorsBrauhardt, Anne, de Zwaan, Martina, Herpertz, Stephan, Zipfel, Stephan, Svaldi, Jennifer, Friederich, Hans-Christoph, Hilbert, Anja January 2014 (has links)
While cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is the most well-established treatment for binge-eating disorder (BED), little is known about process factors influencing its outcome. The present study sought to explore the assessment of therapist adherence, its course over treatment, and its associations with patient and therapist characteristics, and the therapeutic alliance.
In a prospective multicenter randomized-controlled trial comparing CBT to internet-based guided self-help (INTERBED-study), therapist adherence using the newly developed Adherence Control Form (ACF) was determined by trained raters in randomly selected 418 audio-taped CBT sessions of 89 patients (25% of all sessions). Observer-rated therapeutic alliance, interview-based and self-reported patient and therapist characteristics were assessed. Three-level multilevel modeling was applied.
The ACF showed adequate psychometric properties. Therapist adherence was excellent. While significant between-therapist variability in therapist adherence was found, within-therapist variability was non-significant. Patient and therapist characteristics did not predict the therapist adherence. The therapist adherence positively predicted the therapeutic alliance.
The ACF demonstrated its utility to assess therapist adherence in CBT for BED. The excellent levels of therapist adherence point to the internal validity of the CBT within the INTERBED-study serving as a prerequisite for empirical comparisons between treatments. Variability between therapists should be addressed in therapist trainings and dissemination trials.
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