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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 ABPP is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia University and Division of Clinical Developmental Neuroscience at the Sackler Institute. Auerbach, Ph.D., Kessler, Ph.D. References.

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

Society of Clinical Psychology

Parental support in the form of everyday engagement, open and sensitive communication, and monitoring emerges as a critical protective factor during deployment periods (Morris & Age, 2009). The psychosocial effects of deployment on military children. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 49 , 310–320.