Title of article
A pilot study of two-day cognitive-behavioral therapy for panic disorder
Author/Authors
Brett Deacon، نويسنده , , Jonathan Abramowitz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
11
From page
807
To page
817
Abstract
The present study investigated the short-term efficacy of brief, intensive cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for panic disorder (PD). The treatment involved 9 h of therapist contact over two consecutive days and was developed for the purpose of delivering CBT for PD to a largely rural patient population that must travel long distances to find a treatment provider. Ten patients who elected to participate in brief, intensive CBT instead of weekly CBT were recruited from routine clinical practice in a hospital-based anxiety disorders clinic. Patients were not excluded based on the presence of agoraphobia, diagnostic comorbidity, concurrent use of PRN benzodiazepine medications, or previous nonresponse to psychotherapy for PD. Assessments conducted at pre-treatment and 1-month follow-up revealed large, clinically significant reductions in PD symptoms, anxiety sensitivity, body vigilance, and anxiety and depressive symptoms. Most patients (60%) were panic-free after treatment and evidenced normative levels of symptomatology at follow-up. The present study suggests that brief, intensive treatment may be an effective means of delivering CBT for PD.
Keywords
Panic Disorder , Dysfunctional beliefs , assessment , self-report
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Behaviour Research and Therapy
Record number
569967
Link To Document