Authors
David A Brent, David J Kolko, Boris Birmaher, Marianne Baugher, Jeffrey Bridge, Claudia Roth, Diane Holder
Publication date
1998/9/1
Journal
Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
Volume
37
Issue
9
Pages
906-914
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
OBJECTIVE
To assess the predictors of treatment outcome across treatments, as well as those associated with differential treatment response.
METHOD
One hundred seven adolescent outpatients, aged 13 to 18 years, with DSM-III-R major depression were randomly assigned to one of three manual-based, brief (12 to 16 sessions) psychosocial treatments: cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), systemic-behavioral family therapy, or nondirective supportive therapy. Those with good and poor outcomes were compared.
RESULT
Continued depression was predicted by clinical referral (versus via advertisement) and was in part mediated by hopelessness. Other predictors of depression were comorbid anxiety disorder and higher levels of cognitive distortion and hopelessness at intake. Achievement of clinical remission was predicted by a higher level of self-reported depression. Poorer functional status was predicted by …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DA Brent, DJ Kolko, B Birmaher, M Baugher, J Bridge… - Journal of the American Academy of Child & …, 1998