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Consultants' Perceptions of School Counselors' Ability to Implement an Empirically-Based Intervention for Adolescent Social Anxiety Disorder

Masia Warner, Carrie; Brice, Chad; Esseling, Petra G; Stewart, Catherine E; Mufson, Laura; Herzig, Kathleen
Social anxiety is highly prevalent but goes untreated. Although school-based CBT programs are efficacious when delivered by specialized psychologists, it is unclear whether school counselors can implement these interventions effectively, which is essential to promote sustainable school programs. We present an initial consultation strategy to support school counselor implementation of group CBT for social anxiety and an evaluation of counselors' treatment fidelity. Counselors were highly adherent to the treatment, but competence varied based on measurement. Counselors and consultants demonstrated good agreement for adherence, but relatively modest correspondence in competence ratings. We discuss future directions for school-based implementation efforts informed by these initial findings.
PMCID:3796053
PMID: 23716144
ISSN: 0894-587x
CID: 378862

COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY AGE EFFECTS IN CHILD AND ADOLESCENT ANXIETY: AN INDIVIDUAL PATIENT DATA METAANALYSIS

Bennett, Kathryn; Manassis, Katharina; Walter, Stephen D; Cheung, Amy; Wilansky-Traynor, Pamela; Diaz-Granados, Natalia; Duda, Stephanie; Rice, Maureen; Baer, Susan; Barrett, Paula; Bodden, Denise; Cobham, Vanessa E; Dadds, Mark R; Flannery-Schroeder, Ellen; Ginsburg, Golda; Heyne, David; Hudson, Jennifer L; Kendall, Philip C; Liber, Juliette; Warner, Carrie Masia; Mendlowitz, Sandra; Nauta, Maaike H; Rapee, Ronald M; Silverman, Wendy; Siqueland, Lynne; Spence, Susan H; Utens, Elisabeth; Wood, Jeffrey J
BACKGROUND: Investigations of age effects on youth anxiety outcomes in randomized trials (RCTs) of cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) have failed to yield a clear result due to inadequate statistical power and methodologic weaknesses. We conducted an individual patient data metaanalysis to address this gap. QUESTION: Does age moderate CBT effect size, measured by a clinically and statistically significant interaction between age and CBT exposure? METHODS: All English language RCTs of CBT for anxiety in 6-19 year olds were identified using systematic review methods. Investigators of eligible trials were invited to submit their individual patient data. The anxiety disorder interview schedule (ADIS) primary diagnosis severity score was the primary outcome. Age effects were investigated using multilevel modeling to account for study level data clustering and random effects. RESULTS: Data from 17 of 23 eligible trials were obtained (74%); 16 studies and 1,171 (78%) cases were available for the analysis. No interaction between age and CBT exposure was found in a model containing age, sex, ADIS baseline severity score, and comorbid depression diagnosis (power >/= 80%). Sensitivity analyses, including modeling age as both a categorical and continuous variable, revealed this result was robust. CONCLUSIONS: Adolescents who receive CBT in efficacy research studies show benefits comparable to younger children. However, CBT protocol modifications routinely carried out by expert trial therapists may explain these findings. Adolescent CBT protocols are needed to facilitate the transportability of efficacy research effects to usual care settings where therapists may have less opportunity for CBT training and expertise development.
PMCID:4854623
PMID: 23658135
ISSN: 1091-4269
CID: 335352

Integrating illness concerns into cognitive behavioral therapy for children and adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease and co-occurring anxiety

Reigada, Laura C; Benkov, Keith J; Bruzzese, Jean-Marie; Hoogendoorn, Claire; Szigethy, Eva; Briggie, Alexis; Walder, Deborah J; Warner, Carrie Masia
PURPOSE: To examine the feasibility and preliminary benefits of an integrative cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) with adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease and anxiety. DESIGN AND METHODS: Nine adolescents participated in a CBT program at their gastroenterologist's office. Structured diagnostic interviews, self-report measures of anxiety and pain, and physician-rated disease severity were collected pretreatment and post-treatment. RESULTS: Postintervention, 88% of adolescents were treatment responders, and 50% no longer met criteria for their principal anxiety disorder. Decreases were demonstrated in anxiety, pain, and disease severity. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Anxiety screening and a mental health referral to professionals familiar with medical management issues is important.
PMID: 23560585
ISSN: 1539-0136
CID: 334302

Advances and Challenges in School-Based Intervention for Anxious and Depressed Youth: Identifying and Addressing Issues of Sustainability

Masia Warner, Carrie; Fox, Jeremy K
PMCID:3513778
PMID: 23227130
ISSN: 1866-2625
CID: 378872

Self-Disclosure and Mental Health Service Use in Socially Anxious Adolescents

Colognori, Daniela; Esseling, Petra; Stewart, Catherine; Reiss, Philip; Lu, Feihan; Case, Brady; Warner, Carrie Masia
Social anxiety disorder is highly prevalent in adolescence, persistent into adulthood, and associated with multiple impairments. Despite the development of efficacious treatments for socially anxious youth, few affected adolescents receive such treatment. This study examined service use in a sample of high school students (n = 1,574), as well as predictors of treatment delay and factors associated with adolescents' disclosure of social difficulties. Self-report measures of social anxiety and service utilization were administered by study staff to 10th- and 11th-grade classrooms across three public high schools. Consistent with the literature, results indicated low treatment utilization (14 %) and lengthy delays in treatment initiation. Symptom severity, impairment, and disclosing anxiety to school personnel were significant predictors of service utilization. Several demographic and illness-specific factors were associated with a higher likelihood of disclosing social discomfort. These findings underscore the important role of school personnel in identifying and referring youth with anxiety disorders. Implications are discussed for increasing access to services, including school-wide screenings and training of school personnel to recognize and provide intervention for anxious youth.
PMCID:3763858
PMID: 24015156
ISSN: 1866-2625
CID: 2567192

School-based anxiety treatments for children and adolescents

Herzig-Anderson, Kathleen; Colognori, Daniela; Fox, Jeremy K; Stewart, Catherine E; Masia Warner, Carrie
PMCID:3399129
PMID: 22801000
ISSN: 1056-4993
CID: 174573

Treating adolescents with social anxiety disorder in schools

Ryan, Julie L; Warner, Carrie Masia
As is evident from the topic of this issue, schools can play an important role in addressing the unmet mental health needs of youth. Social anxiety disorder is particularly suited to being treated in the school setting. This article describes an empirically supported school-based intervention for social anxiety disorder, skills for academic and social success, and provides specific strategies to school counselors, teachers and community practitioners for implementing these methods. This article focuses on practical approaches for working with socially anxious adolescents in the school setting and how to increase awareness of social anxiety with parents and school personnel.
PMCID:3259736
PMID: 22137815
ISSN: 1056-4993
CID: 157330

Cognitive-behavioral treatment of persistent functional somatic complaints and pediatric anxiety: an initial controlled trial

Warner, Carrie Masia; Colognori, Daniela; Kim, Rachel E; Reigada, Laura C; Klein, Rachel G; Browner-Elhanan, Karen J; Saborsky, Amy; Petkova, Eva; Reiss, Philip; Chhabra, Manoj; McFarlane-Ferreira, Yvonne B; Phoon, Colin K; Pittman, Nanci; Benkov, Keith
Background: Children and adolescents who seek medical treatment for persistent physical distress often suffer from co-occurring anxiety disorders. Treatment options for this impaired population are limited. This study tests the feasibility and potential efficacy of a cognitive-behavioral intervention targeting pain and anxiety for youth with impairing functional physical symptoms and anxiety disorders presenting to pediatricians for medical care. Methods: Children and adolescents (aged 8-16) experiencing somatic complaints, without an explanatory medical disorder (i.e., functional), were recruited from primary care and specialty (gastroenterologists and cardiologists) pediatricians. Forty children, primarily with gastrointestinal symptoms, who met criteria for a co-occurring anxiety disorder, were randomly assigned to a cognitive-behavioral treatment addressing pain and anxiety, Treatment of Anxiety and Physical Symptoms (TAPS), or to a waiting list control. Results: TAPS was found to be an acceptable treatment for this population and was superior to the waiting list condition. Eighty percent of children in TAPS were rated as treatment responders by independent evaluators compared with none of the controls. Overall, self- and parent ratings indicated reductions in children's somatic discomfort and anxiety following intervention. TAPS participants maintained clinical gains 3 months following treatment. Conclusions: The study supports the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of a cognitive-behavioral intervention targeting co-occurring physical distress and anxiety in youth presenting for medical treatment. Such an approach has the potential to exert broad impact on children's dysfunction and to minimize exposure to invasive, ineffective, and costly medical procedures and treatments. Depression and Anxiety, 2011. (c) 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc
PMCID:3128648
PMID: 21681863
ISSN: 1520-6394
CID: 134916

Illness-specific anxiety: implications for functioning and utilization of medical services in adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease

Reigada, Laura C; Bruzzese, Jean-Marie; Benkov, Keith J; Levy, Joseph; Waxman, Amanda R; Petkova, Eva; Warner, Carrie Masia
PURPOSE. Adolescents with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) may be at heightened risk for developing anxiety and depression. This cross-sectional pilot study examined the relationship between anxiety and depression and health-related behaviors. METHODS. Thirty-six adolescents with diagnosed IBD, ages 12-17, and their parents were recruited from two pediatric gastroenterology medical centers. RESULTS. Clinical levels of anxiety (22%) and depressive symptoms (30%) were reported by patients. Regression analyses revealed that IBD-specific anxiety was significantly associated with greater utilization of medical services and worsened psychosocial functioning. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS. Results provide preliminary support that IBD-specific anxiety may play an important role in disease management, yet concerns are rarely systematically assessed by health professionals
PMID: 21702881
ISSN: 1744-6155
CID: 142148

Treating persistent distress and anxiety in parents of children with cancer: an initial feasibility trial

Warner, Carrie Masia; Ludwig, Kristy; Sweeney, Corinne; Spillane, Clare; Hogan, Laura; Ryan, Julie; Carroll, William
Persistent anxiety is common among parents of children with cancer and may affect the family's well-being and adjustment. The goals of this pilot study are to determine the feasibility and potential efficacy of a brief cognitive-behavioral parent intervention aimed at reducing parental distress and anxiety related to their child's cancer diagnosis. Parents of children with cancer, at least 1 month postdiagnosis, were screened at an outpatient oncology clinic, and those reporting elevated levels of distress were offered a 4-session cognitive-behavioral intervention based on a modified version of the Surviving Cancer Competently Intervention Program-Newly Diagnosed. Five parents reporting persistent distress received the intervention. Results revealed decreases in parents' distress, state anxiety, and depressive symptoms, as well as in parents' feelings of burden associated with their children's cancer. This initial study suggests that identification of parents with prolonged heightened psychological distress is feasible and acceptable and that offering them a brief intervention within a pediatric oncology setting may be beneficial
PMID: 21646637
ISSN: 1532-8457
CID: 134914