Background:This study examined whether treatment response to stepped-care cognitive-behavioural treatment (CBT) is associated with changes in threat-related selective attention and its specific components in a large clinical sample of anxiety-disordered children.Methods:Ninety-one children with an anxiety disorder were included in the present study. Children received a standardized stepped-care CBT. Three treatment response groups were distinguished: initial responders (anxiety disorder free after phase one: child-focused CBT), secondary responders (anxiety disorder free after phase two: child-parent-focused CBT), and treatment non-responders. Treatment response was determined using a semi-structured clinical interview. Children performed a...
BACKGROUND: Several delivery formats of cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) for child anxiety have bee...
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is the evidence-based treatment of choice for childhood anxiety d...
Background Pre-treatment biases in attending towards threat have been shown to predict greater sympt...
Background: This study examined whether treatment response to stepped-care cognitive-behavioural tre...
Objective: The present study examined whether threat-related selective attention was predictive of t...
A bias to selectively direct attention to threat stimuli is a cognitive characteristic of anxiety di...
The present study examined whether threat-related selective attention was predictive of treatment su...
Objective: The present study examined whether threat-related selective attention was predictive of t...
Objective: Anxiety disorders of childhood are preva-lent, debilitating conditions that do not always...
Background and objectives: Pretreatment attention bias towards threat stimuli has been shown to pred...
Background: The current nonrandomized clinical trial explored changes over time in children with an ...
The current nonrandomized clinical trial explored changes over time in children with an anxiety diso...
Although Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) represents the gold standard treatment for pediatric anx...
Objective: to examine attention bias towards threat faces in a large sample of anxiety-disorderedyou...
The objective of this study is to assess group differences in symptom reduction between individuals ...
BACKGROUND: Several delivery formats of cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) for child anxiety have bee...
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is the evidence-based treatment of choice for childhood anxiety d...
Background Pre-treatment biases in attending towards threat have been shown to predict greater sympt...
Background: This study examined whether treatment response to stepped-care cognitive-behavioural tre...
Objective: The present study examined whether threat-related selective attention was predictive of t...
A bias to selectively direct attention to threat stimuli is a cognitive characteristic of anxiety di...
The present study examined whether threat-related selective attention was predictive of treatment su...
Objective: The present study examined whether threat-related selective attention was predictive of t...
Objective: Anxiety disorders of childhood are preva-lent, debilitating conditions that do not always...
Background and objectives: Pretreatment attention bias towards threat stimuli has been shown to pred...
Background: The current nonrandomized clinical trial explored changes over time in children with an ...
The current nonrandomized clinical trial explored changes over time in children with an anxiety diso...
Although Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) represents the gold standard treatment for pediatric anx...
Objective: to examine attention bias towards threat faces in a large sample of anxiety-disorderedyou...
The objective of this study is to assess group differences in symptom reduction between individuals ...
BACKGROUND: Several delivery formats of cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) for child anxiety have bee...
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is the evidence-based treatment of choice for childhood anxiety d...
Background Pre-treatment biases in attending towards threat have been shown to predict greater sympt...