Can Parents Treat their Anxious Child using CBT? A Brief Report of a Self-Help Program

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Can Parents Treat their Anxious Child using CBT? A Brief Report of a Self-Help Program. / Esbjørn, Barbara Hoff; Christiansen, Bianca Munkebo; Walczak, Monika Anna; Østergaard, Sofie Wille; Breinholst, Sonja.

I: Acta Psychopathologica, Bind 2, Nr. 1, 2016.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Esbjørn, BH, Christiansen, BM, Walczak, MA, Østergaard, SW & Breinholst, S 2016, 'Can Parents Treat their Anxious Child using CBT? A Brief Report of a Self-Help Program', Acta Psychopathologica, bind 2, nr. 1. https://doi.org/10.4172/2469-6676.100036

APA

Esbjørn, B. H., Christiansen, B. M., Walczak, M. A., Østergaard, S. W., & Breinholst, S. (2016). Can Parents Treat their Anxious Child using CBT? A Brief Report of a Self-Help Program. Acta Psychopathologica, 2(1). https://doi.org/10.4172/2469-6676.100036

Vancouver

Esbjørn BH, Christiansen BM, Walczak MA, Østergaard SW, Breinholst S. Can Parents Treat their Anxious Child using CBT? A Brief Report of a Self-Help Program. Acta Psychopathologica. 2016;2(1). https://doi.org/10.4172/2469-6676.100036

Author

Esbjørn, Barbara Hoff ; Christiansen, Bianca Munkebo ; Walczak, Monika Anna ; Østergaard, Sofie Wille ; Breinholst, Sonja. / Can Parents Treat their Anxious Child using CBT? A Brief Report of a Self-Help Program. I: Acta Psychopathologica. 2016 ; Bind 2, Nr. 1.

Bibtex

@article{1d1a56dda9b647f38ea6efd808ff3c26,
title = "Can Parents Treat their Anxious Child using CBT? A Brief Report of a Self-Help Program",
abstract = "Objective: We developed and tested a self-help program with minimal therapistinvolvement for parents of anxious children.Method: The program focused on transfer of control from therapist to parentsof children with moderate anxiety, and consisted of two therapist-led workshops, a Facebook group, and Cool Kids manuals for parents and children. The sample consisted of 20 families, and 17 completed treatment.Results: After treatment, intent-to-treat analyses indicated that 65% of the children were free of all anxiety disorders. The corresponding figure for completers was 76.5%.Conclusion: Our results suggest that parent-based self-help groups focusing ontransfer of control may be a cost-effective way of providing treatment to children with moderate anxiety",
author = "Esbj{\o}rn, {Barbara Hoff} and Christiansen, {Bianca Munkebo} and Walczak, {Monika Anna} and {\O}stergaard, {Sofie Wille} and Sonja Breinholst",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.4172/2469-6676.100036",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
journal = "Acta Psychopathologica",
issn = "2469-6676",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Can Parents Treat their Anxious Child using CBT? A Brief Report of a Self-Help Program

AU - Esbjørn, Barbara Hoff

AU - Christiansen, Bianca Munkebo

AU - Walczak, Monika Anna

AU - Østergaard, Sofie Wille

AU - Breinholst, Sonja

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Objective: We developed and tested a self-help program with minimal therapistinvolvement for parents of anxious children.Method: The program focused on transfer of control from therapist to parentsof children with moderate anxiety, and consisted of two therapist-led workshops, a Facebook group, and Cool Kids manuals for parents and children. The sample consisted of 20 families, and 17 completed treatment.Results: After treatment, intent-to-treat analyses indicated that 65% of the children were free of all anxiety disorders. The corresponding figure for completers was 76.5%.Conclusion: Our results suggest that parent-based self-help groups focusing ontransfer of control may be a cost-effective way of providing treatment to children with moderate anxiety

AB - Objective: We developed and tested a self-help program with minimal therapistinvolvement for parents of anxious children.Method: The program focused on transfer of control from therapist to parentsof children with moderate anxiety, and consisted of two therapist-led workshops, a Facebook group, and Cool Kids manuals for parents and children. The sample consisted of 20 families, and 17 completed treatment.Results: After treatment, intent-to-treat analyses indicated that 65% of the children were free of all anxiety disorders. The corresponding figure for completers was 76.5%.Conclusion: Our results suggest that parent-based self-help groups focusing ontransfer of control may be a cost-effective way of providing treatment to children with moderate anxiety

U2 - 10.4172/2469-6676.100036

DO - 10.4172/2469-6676.100036

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

JO - Acta Psychopathologica

JF - Acta Psychopathologica

SN - 2469-6676

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 160191228