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      Sustained Implementation of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Youth Anxiety and Depression: Long-term Effects of Structured Training and Consultation on Therapist Practice in the Field.

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          Abstract

          Identifying factors that promote sustained implementation of evidence-based treatments (EBTs) after therapists receive training is critical for professional psychology. To address the field's minimal knowledge in this area, we interviewed community-based therapists (N = 23) who had completed intensive training in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for either anxiety or depression as part of a randomized effectiveness trial (Southam-Gerow et al., 2010; Weisz et al., 2009). Therapists were interviewed three to five years after completion of the initial trial, representing one of the longest-term follow-ups of therapist practices after training. Therapists viewed each protocol and their individual CBT strategies as effective and appropriate for the majority of their current anxiety and depression caseloads. However, therapists used parts of each protocol much more frequently than the protocol as a whole (i.e., 78.5% used parts of the Coping Cat, and 7.5% used the whole protocol; 58.6% used parts of the PASCET, and 20% used the whole protocol). Therapists reported using problem-solving the most and exposure exercises the least for current anxious cases; they used cognitive restructuring the most and homework the least for current depression cases. Interventions that were more difficult to implement in usual care settings were less likely to be sustained. Future efforts should evaluate the characteristics and structure of EBTs that are most acceptable to therapists and should investigate which kinds of ongoing learning supports will maintain therapist skills in and continued use of EBTs.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Prof Psychol Res Pr
          Professional psychology, research and practice
          American Psychological Association (APA)
          0735-7028
          0735-7028
          Feb 2015
          : 46
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.
          [2 ] Virginia Commonwealth University.
          [3 ] Harvard University.
          Article
          NIHMS706639
          10.1037/a0038000
          4565500
          26366037
          76f97a6e-12e2-4a00-8e63-58ca50394cdf
          History

          Dissemination,Implementation,Therapist training
          Dissemination, Implementation, Therapist training

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