2021, Number 6
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Salud Mental 2021; 44 (6)
Tailoring of evidence-based group intervention with children with disruptive behavior: Implications for therapists and researchers
Lochman JE
Language: English
References: 30
Page: 257-260
PDF size: 109.27 Kb.
Text Extraction
The evidence-bas for cognitive-behavioral child interventions has continued to advance
in the past several decades across many areas of psychopathology, including disruptive
behavior problems. We know quite a bit about what works. However, despite earlier research
efforts (e.g., Copeland & Hammel, 1981; Lochman, Lampron, Burch, & Curry,
1985; Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group, 2002), we are still in early stages
of understanding “what works for whom.” Efforts to explore moderators of established
interventions, rather than merely efficacy (La Greca, Silverman, & Lochman, 2009), can
progressively help to identify how we can tailor interventions for different children, and
tailor training for therapists. One example occurs in research efforts to clarify whether
group-based interventions might have iatrogenic effects with some children with disruptive
behavior problems.
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