Refine
Has Fulltext
- no (11) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (7)
- Review (2)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (11)
Keywords
- Baltic Sea (1)
- Biodiversity monitoring (1)
- EXO (1)
- Hypothesis generation (1)
- Lolium perenne (1)
- SDM (1)
- Scirpus maritimus (1)
- apoplast (1)
- climate change (1)
- ecological forecasts (1)
- ecological niche modelling (1)
- ecological theory (1)
- geographical range shifts (1)
- global environmental change (1)
- growth (1)
- hybrid model (1)
- interpersonal behavior (1)
- mechanistic model (1)
- mechanistic models (1)
- migration (1)
- model coupling (1)
- panic disorder with agoraphobia (1)
- parameterization (1)
- process-based model (1)
- process-based statistics (1)
- species distribution model (1)
- sugar response (1)
- therapeutic alliance (1)
- therapist competence (1)
- transient dynamics (1)
- treatment outcome (1)
- trehalose (1)
- uncertainty (1)
- validation (1)
Objective
There is a very limited amount of research on the relationship between therapist and patient in‐session behavior and treatment outcome in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for panic disorder with agoraphobia (PD/AG). Additionally, the findings tend to be inconclusive. This study investigates the association between therapist competence, adherence, patient interpersonal behavior, and therapeutic alliance and outcome in a low‐control CBT setting by using comprehensive measures.
Methods
Twenty‐six patients with PD/AG received 12 sessions of exposure‐based CBT. With regard to the outcome, treatments were classified either as problematic or nonproblematic by means of distinct criteria. Two raters evaluated the in‐session behavior.
Results
Patient interpersonal behavior was significantly associated with outcome at follow‐up (r = 0.49). At posttreatment, the correlation did not reach significance ( r = 0.34). Competence, adherence, and alliance were not outcome associated.
Conclusion
The findings emphasize the need for therapists to pay particular attention to patients’ interpersonal behavior during treatment.