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Beutler, L. E., Moleiro, C., Malik, M., Harwood, M., Romanelli, R., Gallagher-Thompson, D....Thompson, L. (2003). A comparison of the Dodo, EST, and ATI factors among comorbid stimulant-dependent, depressed patients. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy. 10 (2), 69-85
L. Beutler et al., "A comparison of the Dodo, EST, and ATI factors among comorbid stimulant-dependent, depressed patients", in Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, vol. 10, no. 2, pp. 69-85, 2003
@article{beutler2003_1766315362799,
author = "Beutler, L. E. and Moleiro, C. and Malik, M. and Harwood, M. and Romanelli, R. and Gallagher-Thompson, D. and Thompson, L.",
title = "A comparison of the Dodo, EST, and ATI factors among comorbid stimulant-dependent, depressed patients",
journal = "Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy",
year = "2003",
volume = "10",
number = "2",
doi = "10.1002/cpp.354",
pages = "69-85",
url = "http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cpp.354/abstract"
}
TY - JOUR TI - A comparison of the Dodo, EST, and ATI factors among comorbid stimulant-dependent, depressed patients T2 - Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy VL - 10 IS - 2 AU - Beutler, L. E. AU - Moleiro, C. AU - Malik, M. AU - Harwood, M. AU - Romanelli, R. AU - Gallagher-Thompson, D. AU - Thompson, L. PY - 2003 SP - 69-85 SN - 1063-3995 DO - 10.1002/cpp.354 UR - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/cpp.354/abstract AB - Describes pilot findings from a treatment development study aimed at improving treatment for comorbid depressed and chemically-dependent patients. A comparison of standard RCT analyses with Hierarchical Multiple Regression (HLM) procedures revealed the latter to be more sensitive to the relative effects of patient, treatment, and patient–treatment matching variables among a small sample of (N = 40) depressed, stimulant-abusing patients. Participants were randomly assigned to one of three treatments, a standard Cognitive Therapy for Drug Abuse (CT), a contrasting Cognitive-Narrative Therapy (NT), and a Prescriptive Therapy (PT), the latter of which selectively applied procedures from both of the other two treatments following an Aptitude × Treatment Interaction (ATI) model. The results supported a multiple factor view of psychotherapy effects, including the hypothesis that patient, treatment, relationship, and patient-therapy matching variables add independent power to the prediction of treatment outcome, especially during follow-up. ATI effect sizes were stronger than those associated with specific treatments. ER -
English