Evidence-based psychotherapies for children and adolescents by Weisz and Kazdin (third edition) – Book summary
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Anxiety disorders are common in youth with a prevalence rate of 10% to 20%. It is associated with difficulties in academic achievement, social and peer relations and future emotional health. It is a risk factor for comorbidity and comorbidity is also very common.
Anxiety consists of a behavioural (1), physiological (2) and cognitive component (3). Anxiety is part of normal development (i.e. it cautions one against danger) and can bolster performance (e.g. tests). However, too much anxiety can quickly become distressing. Youth with anxiety view the world as dangerous (1), experience physical complaints (2) and avoid certain situations (3). Avoidance reinforces feelings of anxiety and avoidance behaviours.
Coping Cat is a treatment for anxiety disorders for children from the age of 7 to 13. This treatment targets all aspects of anxiety (i.e. tripartite model). It includes psychoeducation (1), somatic management skills (2), cognitive restructuring (3), gradual exposure to feared situations (4) and relapse prevention plans (5). Affective awareness is increased during the early stages of treatment and corrective information about anxiety is provided (e.g. normalization of feelings of anxiety). Somatic management techniques are introduced as adaptive responses. Cognitive restructuring focuses on challenging maladaptive thoughts and shifting to coping-focused thinking. The C.A.T. project is a treatment for anxiety disorders for adolescents. CBT may also be useful.
The goal of the Coping Cat treatment is to teach youth to recognize signs of anxiety and implement strategies to better cope with the distress rather than completely eliminate anxiety. There is typically an individual meeting with the child for several weeks and two meetings with the parents. Coping Cat mainly focuses on practicing the application of anxiety management strategies in real, anxiety-provoking situations.
In the first half of the treatment, children are being taught a four-step FEAR plan to organize the psychoeducational content into problem-solving steps:
The second half of the treatment is devoted to the application of the FEAR plan within exposure to increasingly anxiety-provoking situations. Near the end of the treatment, the youth creates a product summarizing experiences that can help other youth manage anxiety, giving youth a chance to become expert by experience.
Parental involvement is part of the Coping Cat treatment. Parents are used as consultants (1), collaborators (2) or co-clients (3). Therapists meet the parents individually (i.e. without the child) for two sessions to collaborate on treatment plans, maintain cooperation and discuss concerns. Parents are told how they can foster positive outcomes and parent techniques are discussed (e.g. maintaining anxiety through modelling). One session is during the skill-building phase and one before exposure.
The Coping Cat treatment can be flexible as it is driven by techniques and not by session-per-session topics. The Coping Cat treatment is efficacious.
RCTs has shown that the Coping Cat treatment reduces anxiety compared to a waiting list and gains were maintained for over a year. Combined treatment with medication may be even more effective though this is not entirely sure.
A family-based Coping Cat increases parental involvement and uses the same protocol but the parents are included at all sessions. Individual Coping Cat outperformed family-based Coping Cat for teacher reports of anxiety. However, family-based Coping Cat was more effective than individual Coping Cat when both parents had an anxiety disorder. Group-based Coping Cat was effective but not for self-reports of anxiety. Emotion-based Coping Cat seems effective and also reduces emotional inflexibility and improves emotion regulation. A brief version of Coping Cat seems to be effective. Computed-based Coping Cat is also a feasible alternative.
There are several variables which may affect treatment outcome:
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This bundle contains a book summary of the book Evidence-based psychotherapies for children and adolescents by Weisz and Kazdin (third edition). It contains the following chapters:
- 1, 2, 4, 12, 13, 15
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