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Do Dialectical Behavior Therapy-Based Interventions Decrease Adolescent Externalizing Symptoms? A Meta-Analysis

Society of Clinical Psychology

Adolescence is an important developmental period during which youth experience key changes in their ability to regulate emotions and behavior, and engage in more reward-seeking and risk-taking behaviors than during childhood (Andrews et al., Although externalizing problems are a common reason for psychiatric referrals (Connor et al.,

DBT 52
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Prioritizing Mental Health on College Campuses

Society of Clinical Psychology

One notable exception was that students identifying as non-heterosexual and engaging in same-sex behaviors reported a 3.4 Dr. Kessler is the only psychiatric epidemiologist ever elected to the National Academy of Science and also is a member of the National Academy of Medicine. gender, parental education) and college-related (e.g.,

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Parental Military Deployment and Children: What Have We Learned from More than a Decade of War?

Society of Clinical Psychology

Major military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan have since ceased but the resulting instability of the Middle East almost certainly ensures future intervention. Effective support and intervention services for these two groups of children may in turn differ. The psychosocial effects of deployment on military children.