For the purposes of this article, the general
term psychosocial treatments will be used to represent the variety of interventions subsumed in this literature (e.g., child behavior management, parent training, classroom management, peer interventions, etc).
Not exact matches
They address health promotion, surveillance for recurrence and screening for second primary cancers, and the assessment and management of physical and
psychosocial long -
term and late effects resulting from prostate cancer and its
treatment.
Additional limitations to the traditional approach include: costly failures to replicate positive results in larger trials; difficulty in determining the reasons for negative results; low yield in
terms of identifying disease or intervention mechanisms due to an exclusive focus on symptom change and clinical endpoints; and, the expensive and very lengthy practice of first establishing multi-component
psychosocial treatments followed by years of «unpacking» studies.
Behavioral Science provides research - driven clinical care to promote a healthy lifestyle and encourage changes to reduce cancer risk, improve adherence to cancer
treatment, enhance survivors» coping with long -
term consequences of cancer
treatment and provide a model of optimal care for cancer - related
psychosocial and behavioral issues.
In
terms of evidence - based physiotherapy practice, cognitive - behavioural approaches for patients at high
psychosocial risk are the recommended management to improve patient
treatment outcomes.
We calculated χ2 statistics, t tests, and correlation coefficients to analyze the bivariate associations between each potential predictor variable (anthropometric and
psychosocial family characteristics) and the 2 criteria of long -
term weight change: success versus failure in weight reduction up to the 12 - month follow - up and weight change between the conclusion of
treatment and the 12 - month follow - up.
The use of the
term «
psychosocial treatments» in the title is somewhat misleading because the authors make it clear that their interest is in the relative efficacy of cognitive and behavioural therapies.
What evidence is available about the long -
term efficacy and safety of
psychosocial interventions (behavioral modification) for the
treatment of ADHD for children, and specifically, what information is available about the efficacy and safety of these interventions in preschool - aged and adolescent patients?
Phase III: Long -
term Providers in many settings have the chance to care for children over the long haul — and can be instrumental in continuing to support adaptive coping, detecting persistent traumatic stress reactions or other emotional sequelae, and referring children and families for
psychosocial assessment and
treatment.
The interaction of psychopathological states and
psychosocial functioning determine the long -
term course of schizophrenia and its
treatment.
Given the potential for negative long -
term outcomes,
psychosocial treatments that produce lasting changes in child anxiety may serve an important preventive function affecting the course of later mental health and functioning [6].
To understand comprehensively which
psychosocial factors are most useful for achieving pregnancy, for short -
term coping and for long -
term well - being whatever the pregnancy outcome is, would be extremely useful for patients, clinicians, psychologists developing interventions and for
treatment planning and policy design.
Within the past 15 years, a new
psychosocial treatment termed dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) was developed specifically to treat BPD, and this technique has looked promising in
treatment studies.