The role of parental anxiety in the treatment of childhood anxiety
Data(s) |
01/01/1998
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Resumo |
Sixty-seven children aged 7 to 14 who met diagnostic criteria for an anxiety disorder were assigned to conditions according to parental anxiety level. Within these conditions, children were randomly assigned to I of 2 treatments: child-focused cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) or child-focused CBT plus parental anxiety management (CBT + PAM). At posttreatment, results indicated that within the child-anxiety-only condition, 82% of the children in the CBT condition no longer met criteria for an anxiety disorder compared with 80% in the CBT + PAM condition. Within the child + parental anxiety condition, 39% in the CBT condition no longer met criteria compared with 77% in the CBT + PAM condition. At follow-up, these differences were maintained, with some weakening over time. Results were not consistent across outcome measures. The interpretation and potential clinical implications of these findings are discussed. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Palavras-Chave | #Psychology, Clinical #Cognitive-behavioral Treatment #Disorders Interview Schedule #Randomized Clinical-trial #Structured Interview #Follow-up #Children #Adolescents #Reliability #Therapy #Sample |
Tipo |
Journal Article |