a post by David Pescovitz for the Boing Boing blog
New studies seem to support that very short, intense cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) may be as helpful as traditional CBT treatment schedules in helping kids with anxiety disorders like OCD. And when I say short, I'm talking about three hours of treatment for phobias and four days of therapy for obsessive-compulsive disorder.
According to a meta-analysis by Thomas Ollendick, director of Virgina Tech's Child Study Center, and Stockholm University professor emeritus Lars-Göran Öst, as described in Scientific American, "with the quicker therapies, 54 percent of patients were better immediately post-treatment, and that rose to 64 percent on follow-up—presumably because they continued to practice and apply what they had learned. With standard therapy, 57 percent were better after the final session and 63 percent on follow-up." I'm sure mileage varies tremendously between individuals but cognitive behavioral therapy absolutely works and if there's a more efficient way for kids (and adults) to learn the techniques and then actually use them to get relief, that's fantastic news.
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