11 results on '"Rapee, Ronald M."'
Search Results
2. Prediction of clinical anxious and depressive problems in mid childhood amongst temperamentally inhibited preschool children: a population study
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Bayer, Jordana K., Prendergast, Luke A., Brown, Amy, Bretherton, Lesley, Hiscock, Harriet, Nelson-Lowe, Margaret, Gilbertson, Tamsyn, Noone, Kate, Bischof, Natalie, Beechey, Cassima, Muliadi, Fenny, Mihalopoulos, Cathrine, and Rapee, Ronald M.
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- 2023
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3. The Effect of Spirituality on Mood: Mediation by Self-Esteem, Social Support, and Meaning in Life
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Craig, David J., Fardouly, Jasmine, and Rapee, Ronald M.
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- 2022
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4. The meditating role of sleep in the longitudinal associations between peer victimization and internalizing symptoms: A cross-lagged panel analysis.
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Bartlett, Gillian R., Magson, Natasha M., Richardson, Cele E., Rapee, Ronald M., Fardouly, Jasmine, and Oar, Ella L.
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SLEEP duration ,INTERNALIZING behavior ,SOCIAL anxiety ,AUSTRALIANS ,PANEL analysis - Abstract
Adolescence is a time of heightened vulnerability for both peer victimization (PV) and internalizing symptoms. While the positive association between them is well established, there is little understanding of the mechanisms underpinning this relationship. To address this gap, the current study aimed to investigate sleep hygiene and school night sleep duration as individual and sequential mediators of the relationship between PV and both depressive and social anxiety symptoms during pre- to mid-adolescence. The study drew upon a community sample of 528 Australian youth aged 10–12 years at baseline (M
age = 11.19, SD =.55; 51.1% boys) and data were collected over five annual measurement occasions. Direct and indirect longitudinal and bidirectional associations were examined using cross-lagged panel analysis. There was no evidence of sequential mediation through both sleep hygiene and sleep duration to depression and social anxiety. Instead, the findings show that sleep hygiene mediated the prospective association between PV and both depressive and social anxiety symptoms, and between PV and sleep duration. Overall, sleep hygiene represents a modifiable transdiagnostic factor that can be targeted to break the cycle of PV, inadequate sleep, and internalizing symptoms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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5. Effectiveness of Psychotherapy for Internalising Symptoms in Children and Adolescents When Delivered in Routine Settings: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis.
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Wuthrich, Viviana M., Zagic, Dino, Dickson, Sophie J., McLellan, Lauren F., Chen, Jessamine T.-H., Jones, Michael P., and Rapee, Ronald M.
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PSYCHOTHERAPY ,BEHAVIOR therapy ,COGNITIVE therapy ,VIOLENCE in the community ,SCHOOL children ,TEENAGERS ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to examine the effectiveness of psychological interventions for internalising disorders in youth when delivered in routine settings. Secondary aims were to examine the effectiveness of cognitive behavioural therapy and determine moderators of treatment response. The study was pre-registered (PROSPERO 2020 CRD42020202776). Databases were systematically searched (PsycINFO, Medline, Embase, PubMed, ERIC) in December 2022 and screened according to the PRISMA 2020 statement. Inclusion: School aged participants (4–18 years) with a primary internalising disorder; psychotherapy delivered in a routine setting (e.g. outpatient clinic, school) by setting staff; compared psychotherapy to any control in a randomised controlled trial; reported pre-to-post or pre-to-follow-up comparisons on the primary disorder according to child, parent or independent evaluator report; and was published in English. Risk of bias was assessed using the ROB 2.0 Cochrane tool. Results were synthesised using random effects to pool estimates. Risk ratios were used to analyse dichotomous data and standardised mean differences (SMD) for continuous data. Forty-five studies were included (N = 4901 participants; M = 13 years; range 8–16; SD = 2.5). Nine used waitlist control, 17 treatment as usual, 4 placebo; 15 compared psychotherapy to active control. Psychotherapy was associated with small significant effects pre- to post-treatment compared to non-active controls for anxiety (SMD = − 0.24 to 0.50) and depression (SMD = − 0.19 to 0.34) with effects differing by informant. Psychotherapy led to small significant pre-to-post-benefits in youth internalising disorders in routine settings. Results are limited by reporter type and follow-up. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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6. The role of parenting behaviors in the bidirectional and intergenerational transmission of depression and anxiety between parents and early adolescent youth.
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Johnco, Carly J., Magson, Natasha R., Fardouly, Jasmine, Oar, Ella L., Forbes, Miriam K., Richardson, Cele, and Rapee, Ronald M.
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PARENTING ,PARENT-child relationships ,CHILD psychopathology ,REJECTION (Psychology) ,ANXIETY ,DEPRESSION in adolescence ,AT-risk youth - Abstract
Background: Parenting is a modifiable factor proposed to underpin the transmission of anxiety and depression from parents to children. This study examined the role of parenting in the intergenerational transmission of anxiety and depression across pre‐ and early adolescence. Method: Participants were 531 youth (Mage = 11.18, SD = 0.56; 50.85% boys) and their parent. Child and parent anxiety and depression, and parental rejection, warmth and overprotection were assessed annually over 3 years. Bidirectional relationships between parent and child anxiety and depression, and the mediating role of parenting behaviors, were examined using cross‐lagged panel models. Results: Results suggest bidirectional associations over time between parent and child depression, and parental rejection and child depression. Parental rejection and low warmth were associated with increases in child depression, but did not mediate depression transmission. Parental anxiety was associated with increases in child anxiety and depression, but there was no bidirectional association from child psychopathology to parental anxiety. There was little evidence that parenting predicted changes in child anxiety over time. Child anxiety and depression were associated with subsequent increases in parental depression. Conclusion: Parental depression, rejection and low warmth are independent risk factors for child depression. Parental rejection may also be a consequence of parenting a depressed youth. Parenting did not account for the apparent transmission of parental anxiety to increased child anxiety and depression. Child psychopathology increases risk of parental depression. Parental rejection may be an important modifiable risk factor for youth depression in early adolescence, and may also reduce later risk of parent depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Long-term remission and relapse of anxiety and depression in older adults after Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT): A 10-year follow-up of a randomised controlled trial.
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Johnco, Carly J., Zagic, Dino, Rapee, Ronald M., Kangas, Maria, and Wuthrich, Viviana M.
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OLDER people , *BEHAVIOR therapy , *COGNITIVE therapy , *RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *ANXIETY , *SUBSTANCE abuse relapse - Abstract
This study examined the long-term durability of cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) for older adults with comorbid anxiety and depression 10 years after treatment, in comparison to an active control group. Participants from a randomised controlled trial for older adults with comorbid anxiety and depression (Wuthrich et al., 2016) were re-contacted. Participants had received either group CBT or an active control treatment (Discussion Group). The final sample (N = 54; Aged 70–84, M age = 76.07, SD = 3.83; 59 % of the eligible original sample) completed a diagnostic interview, cognitive assessment and self-report measures of symptoms and quality of life. CBT was associated with significantly improved long-term (10-year) efficacy for reducing anxiety and depression in older adults compared to the Discussion group. Effects included higher rates of remission (58 % remission of all diagnoses vs 27 %, 88 % of all depressive diagnoses vs 54 %, 63 % of all anxiety diagnoses vs 35 %, 67 % of primary diagnosis vs 42 %), lower rates of relapse (25–31 % vs 50–78 %) and lower rates of chronic treatment-resistance (8 % primary disorder vs 39 %, 21 % any disorder vs 58 %). Participants who showed an acute treatment response at post-treatment were 7–9 times more likely to be in remission after 10 years than those with residual symptoms. Results may not generalise to those who do not complete CBT, and the time trajectory of symptom change is unclear. Long-term improvements in symptoms are specific to CBT. Results provide compelling evidence for CBT as an effective and durable treatment for late-life anxiety and depression. • Assessed the durability of CBT among older adults 10 years after treatment • Compared effects to an active control group • CBT was associated with higher remission, lower relapse and chronic non-response. • CBT has long-lasting benefits for anxiety and depression in older adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. The development and preliminary validation of a brief scale of emotional distress in young people using combined classical test theory and item response theory approaches: The Brief Emotional Distress Scale for Youth (BEDSY).
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Spence, Susan H. and Rapee, Ronald M.
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CLASSICAL test theory , *ITEM response theory , *PSYCHOLOGICAL distress , *MENTAL illness , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling - Abstract
Reliable, valid, and brief measures are important for identifying young people in community contexts who experience mental health problems. This paper reports the development and preliminary validation of the Brief Emotional Distress Scale for Youth (BEDSY), a measure based on anxiety and depression symptoms that load strongly upon the general construct of emotional distress. Participants, aged 11–17 years, included 2663 from a community population and 281 referred anxious youth. From a pool of 20 items, eight were selected for the final scale using methods from classical test theory, followed by item response theory (IRT). The final eight items met the pre-specified criteria for skewness and kurtosis, item-total correlations, IRT characteristics, and discrimination between referred vs. community samples. Exploratory structural equation modeling for a bi-factor model indicated that 81% of total variance was explained by the general emotional distress factor. The 8-item BEDSY showed strong internal consistency, good construct validity, and acceptable sensitivity and specificity in discriminating between a community sample vs anxious youth, and between youth with and without high levels of depressive symptoms. As such the scale has strong potential as a brief screen for identifying emotionally distressed young people in community contexts. • The BEDSY is a new, brief, self-report scale of emotional distress in young people. • It has promise as a brief screen for identifying emotionally distressed youth in community contexts. • It aims to identify youth who are likely to benefit from early intervention. • The scale has strong internal consistency, good construct validity, and discriminant validity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. Temporal associations of emotional and social loneliness and psychosocial functioning in emerging adulthood.
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Mobach, Lynn, Wolters, Nine E., Klein, Anke M., Koelen, Jurrijn A., Vonk, Peter, Heijde, Claudia M., Wuthrich, Viviana M., Rapee, Ronald M., and Wiers, Reinout W.
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LONELINESS , *TRANSITION to adulthood , *YOUNG adults , *SOCIAL anxiety , *PSYCHOSOCIAL functioning , *SOCIAL isolation , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
Emerging adulthood is an important developmental phase often accompanied by peaks in loneliness, social anxiety, and depression. However, knowledge is lacking on how the relationships between emotional loneliness, social loneliness, social isolation, social anxiety and depression evolve over time. Gaining insight in these temporal relations is crucial for our understanding of how these problems arise and maintain each other across time. Young adults from a university sample (N = 1,357; M = 23.60 years, SD = 6.30) filled out questionnaires on emotional and social loneliness, social isolation, depressive and social anxiety symptoms at three time points within a 3‐year period. Random intercept cross‐lagged panel models were used to disentangle reciprocal and prospective associations of loneliness subtypes, social isolation, depressive and social anxiety symptoms across time. Results showed that on the within‐person level, increases in emotional and social loneliness as well as social isolation predicted higher depression levels on later timepoints. Increases in depressive symptoms also predicted increases in subsequent social loneliness, but not in emotional loneliness. Finally, increases in depressive symptoms predicted increases in social isolation. There were no significant temporal relations between loneliness and social isolation on the one hand and social anxiety symptoms on the other hand. Social distancing imposed by COVID‐19 related government restrictions may have impacted the current results. The findings suggest that emotional and social loneliness precede development of depressive symptoms, which in turn precedes development of social loneliness and social isolation, indicating a potential vicious cycle of social loneliness, social isolation and depressive symptoms in emerging adulthood. Social anxiety did not precede nor follow loneliness, depressive symptoms, or social isolation. The current study sheds more light on the temporal order of loneliness and psychopathological symptoms and hereby assists in identifying times where prevention and intervention efforts may be especially helpful to counter development of depression and loneliness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Emotional and social loneliness and their unique links with social isolation, depression and anxiety.
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Wolters, Nine E., Mobach, Lynn, Wuthrich, Viviana M., Vonk, Peter, Van der Heijde, Claudia M., Wiers, Reinout W., Rapee, Ronald M., and Klein, Anke M.
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LONELINESS , *SOCIAL isolation , *SOCIAL anxiety , *ANXIETY , *MENTAL depression , *MENTAL health - Abstract
Loneliness and social isolation are known to be associated with depression, general anxiety, and social anxiety. However, knowledge on the overlapping and unique features of these relationships, while differentiating between social loneliness (perceived absence of an acceptable social network) and emotional loneliness (perceived absence of close connections), is lacking. We constructed a network analysis to examine the relationships between self-reported social loneliness, emotional loneliness, social isolation, depression, general anxiety and social anxiety in a large sample of university students (N = 7314, 67.4 % female, range 16.3–75.8 years, M age = 23.9, SD age = 5.7). Hierarchical regression analyses were used to examine whether depression, general anxiety and social anxiety moderated the relationship between social isolation and loneliness types. As comorbidity between anxiety and depression is high, the role of anxiety as a moderator in the relationship between depression and loneliness types was also examined. The network analysis showed that social loneliness was most strongly explained by social isolation, whereas emotional loneliness was most strongly explained by social anxiety and depression. General anxiety was solely related to loneliness through depression. The regression analyses showed that general and social anxiety and depression did not moderate the relationship between social isolation and loneliness types. Differences found between loneliness types may be influenced by a methodological artifact of the DJGLS. These findings highlight the importance of social anxiety over general anxiety in relation to loneliness. Also, it showed unique relationships for social- and emotional loneliness with psycho-social variables, which has important implications for research- and clinical settings. • Emotional and social loneliness are strongly related. • The network shows the impact of social anxiety over general anxiety on loneliness. • Mental health does not moderate relation between social isolation and loneliness. • Unique relationships for loneliness types may be relevant for clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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11. Online treatment of adolescents with comorbid anxiety and depression: A randomized controlled trial.
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Schniering, Carolyn A., Einstein, Danielle, Kirkman, Jessica J.L., and Rapee, Ronald M.
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RANDOMIZED controlled trials , *COGNITIVE therapy , *TEENAGERS , *MENTAL depression , *ANXIETY disorders , *SERVICES for caregivers , *ANXIETY treatment , *ANXIETY disorders treatment , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH methodology , *EVALUATION research , *TREATMENT effectiveness , *COMPARATIVE studies - Abstract
Objective: Adolescents experiencing both anxiety and mood disorders show greater life impairment than those with either disorder alone. The aim of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of an online cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) program for these comorbid youth.Methods: Ninety-one adolescents aged 12 to 17 years (M = 14.29, S.D. = 1.62; 66% female) participated if they met DSM-5 criteria for both an anxiety and depressive disorder. Diagnoses were assessed by structured interview and participants also completed measures of symptoms, negative thoughts, and life interference. Participants were randomly allocated to either active treatment (n = 45) or wait (n = 46). Treatment comprised access to an 8-module, online program and was supported by 8, 30-minute telephone sessions with a therapist and the youth, of which the caregiver participated in four.Results: Treated participants showed significantly greater reduction than waiting participants on the primary outcome: total number of disorders and were more likely to remit from all anxiety and mood disorders (43.8% vs 20.9%). Secondary outcomes covering symptoms of anxiety and depression showed similar group by time differences, but there was no significant group by time interaction on life interference.Conclusions: This brief, easily accessible, online intervention that requires relatively low levels of therapist time showed promising impact for a very impaired population.Registration: This trial was registered on the ANZ clinical trials registry-ACTRN12616000139471. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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