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Differential responses of positive affect, negative affect, and worry in CBT for generalized anxiety disorder: A person-specific analysis of symptom course during therapy

Introduction: Research indicates that individuals with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) may experience deficits in positive affect (PA), and tend to dampen or intentionally suppress PA. Despite the presence of PA-related pathology in GAD, little is known about change in PA during GAD treatment. Ob...

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Published in:Psychotherapy research 2018-07, Vol.28 (4), p.630-642
Main Authors: Bosley, Hannah G., Fisher, Aaron J., Taylor, C. Barr
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Language:English
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description Introduction: Research indicates that individuals with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) may experience deficits in positive affect (PA), and tend to dampen or intentionally suppress PA. Despite the presence of PA-related pathology in GAD, little is known about change in PA during GAD treatment. Objective: This study examines changes in PA, negative affect (NA) and worry in seven participants during cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for GAD. Method: Intensive repeated measures (i.e., time series) data were subjected to person-specific regression analysis to delineate individual change trajectories. Results: Significant improvement in worry was observed in all but one participant. Fear and irritability - indices of NA - each improved in 5/7 participants while sadness improved in 4/7 participants (worsening in one). Of all symptom domains, PA had the poorest treatment response: PA improved in only 2/7 participants and actually significantly worsened in 5/7 individuals even as NA and worry improved during therapy. Conclusion: These findings indicate that treatment gains from traditional CBT for GAD may not generalize to improvements in PA regulation, or even emotional functioning more broadly. This evidence is a call to increase the focus on PA regulation in treatment for GAD; perhaps PA could be a missing piece in our understanding of ways to bolster GAD treatment outcomes.
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Of all symptom domains, PA had the poorest treatment response: PA improved in only 2/7 participants and actually significantly worsened in 5/7 individuals even as NA and worry improved during therapy. Conclusion: These findings indicate that treatment gains from traditional CBT for GAD may not generalize to improvements in PA regulation, or even emotional functioning more broadly. 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Fear and irritability - indices of NA - each improved in 5/7 participants while sadness improved in 4/7 participants (worsening in one). Of all symptom domains, PA had the poorest treatment response: PA improved in only 2/7 participants and actually significantly worsened in 5/7 individuals even as NA and worry improved during therapy. Conclusion: These findings indicate that treatment gains from traditional CBT for GAD may not generalize to improvements in PA regulation, or even emotional functioning more broadly. 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Barr</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Differential responses of positive affect, negative affect, and worry in CBT for generalized anxiety disorder: A person-specific analysis of symptom course during therapy</atitle><jtitle>Psychotherapy research</jtitle><addtitle>Psychother Res</addtitle><date>2018-07-04</date><risdate>2018</risdate><volume>28</volume><issue>4</issue><spage>630</spage><epage>642</epage><pages>630-642</pages><issn>1050-3307</issn><eissn>1468-4381</eissn><abstract>Introduction: Research indicates that individuals with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) may experience deficits in positive affect (PA), and tend to dampen or intentionally suppress PA. Despite the presence of PA-related pathology in GAD, little is known about change in PA during GAD treatment. Objective: This study examines changes in PA, negative affect (NA) and worry in seven participants during cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for GAD. Method: Intensive repeated measures (i.e., time series) data were subjected to person-specific regression analysis to delineate individual change trajectories. Results: Significant improvement in worry was observed in all but one participant. Fear and irritability - indices of NA - each improved in 5/7 participants while sadness improved in 4/7 participants (worsening in one). Of all symptom domains, PA had the poorest treatment response: PA improved in only 2/7 participants and actually significantly worsened in 5/7 individuals even as NA and worry improved during therapy. Conclusion: These findings indicate that treatment gains from traditional CBT for GAD may not generalize to improvements in PA regulation, or even emotional functioning more broadly. 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ispartof Psychotherapy research, 2018-07, Vol.28 (4), p.630-642
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language eng
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Taylor & Francis
subjects afeto positivo
Affect (Psychology)
Anxiety disorders
Behavioral psychology
Clinical outcomes
Cognitive behavioral therapy
Cognitive-behavioral factors
disturbo d'ansia generalizzato
Emotional regulation
Emotional well being
emozioni positive
generalisierte Angststörung
Generalized anxiety disorder
idiografica
idiographic
idiographisch
idiográfica
Irritability
Negative emotions
Pathology
person-specific
persona-specifico
personenspezifisch
pessoa específica
positive affect
Positive emotions
positiver Affekt
preocupação
Sadness
Sorge
Time series
Traditional medicine
transtorno de ansiedade generalizada
Worry
個別-特定
廣泛性焦慮症
正向情緒
焦慮
獨特的
title Differential responses of positive affect, negative affect, and worry in CBT for generalized anxiety disorder: A person-specific analysis of symptom course during therapy
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