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  • DOI:10.1001/ARCHPSYC.57.2.165
  • Corpus ID: 23830763
A randomized controlled trial of cognitive-behavioral therapy for persistent symptoms in schizophrenia resistant to medication.@article{Sensky2000ARC, title={A randomized controlled trial of cognitive-behavioral therapy for persistent symptoms in schizophrenia resistant to medication.}, author={Tom Sensky and Douglas Turkington and David Kingdon and Jan Scott and J E Scott and Ronald Siddle and Madeline O'Carroll and T. R. E. Barnes}, journal={Archives of general psychiatry}, year={2000}, volume={57 2}, pages={ 165-72 }, url={https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:23830763} }
  • T. SenskyD. Turkington+5 authors T. Barnes
  • Published in Archives of General… 1 February 2000
  • Medicine, Psychology
TLDRCognitive-behavioral therapy is effective in treating negative as well as positive symptoms in schizophrenia resistant to standard antipsychotic drugs, with its efficacy sustained over 9 months of follow-up.ExpandView on PubMedjamanetwork.comSave to LibrarySaveCreate AlertAlertCiteShare670 CitationsHighly Influential Citations32Background Citations182 Methods Citations40 Results Citations37View All

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670 Citations

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31 References

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A Trial of Two Cognitive-Behavioural Methods of Treating Drug-Resistant Residual Psychotic Symptoms in Schizophrenic Patients: I. Outcome

    N. TarrierR. BeckettS. HarwoodA. BakerLawrence YusupoffItziar UgarteburuPsychology, MedicineBritish Journal of Psychiatry
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TLDRA controlled trial of two cognitive-behavioural treatments to alleviate residual hallucinations and delusions in schizophrenic patients showed significant reductions in pyschotic symptoms compared with those in the waiting period, who showed no improvement.Expand
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Randomised controlled trial of intensive cognitive behaviour therapy for patients with chronic schizophrenia

    N. TarrierLawrence Yusupoff+4 authors Julie MorrisMedicine, PsychologyBMJ
  • 1998
TLDRCognitive behaviour therapy is a potentially useful adjunct treatment in the management of patients with chronic schizophrenia and results in almost eight times greater odds of showing this improvement.Expand
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London-East Anglia randomised controlled trial of cognitive-behavioural therapy for psychosis

    E. KuipersD. Fowler+5 authors Clare HadleyPsychology, MedicineBritish Journal of Psychiatry
  • 1998
TLDRImprovement in overall symptoms was maintained in the CBT group 18 months after baseline and nine months after intensive therapy was completed, suggesting CBT may be a specific and cost-effective intervention in medication-resistant psychosis.Expand
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Cognitive Therapy and Recovery from Acute Psychosis: a Controlled Trial

    V. DruryM. BirchwoodR. CochraneF. MacmillanPsychology, MedicineBritish Journal of Psychiatry
  • 1996
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Compliance therapy in psychotic patients: randomised controlled trial

    R. KempP. HaywardGrantley ApplewhaiteBrian EverittA. DavidPsychology, MedicineBMJ
  • 1996
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London–East Anglia randomised controlled trial of cognitive–behavioural therapy for psychosis

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  • 1997
TLDRCBT for psychosis can improve overall symptomatology, and the findings provide evidence that even a refractory group of clients with a long history of psychosis can engage in talking about psychotic symptoms and their meaning, and this can improve outcome.Expand
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Cognitive Behaviour Therapy of Schizophrenia

    D. KingdonD. TurkingtonC. JohnPsychology, MedicineBritish Journal of Psychiatry
  • 1994
TLDRCognitive behavioural therapies based on the work of Beck (Beck eta!, 1979)and Ellis (1962), supported by experimental evidence, are now being developed to supplement the use of psychosocial approaches in schizophrenia.Expand
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Cognitive Therapy for Major Depressive Disorder in Primary Care

    J. TeasdaleM. J. FennellG. HibbertP. L. AmiesMedicine, PsychologyBritish Journal of Psychiatry
  • 1984
TLDRAt three-month follow-up cognitive therapy patients no longer differed from patients receiving treatment-as-usual, but this was mainly as a result of continuing improvement in the comparison group.Expand
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The Use of Cognitive Behavior Therapy with a Normalizing Rationale in Schizophrenia: Preliminary Report

    D. KingdonDouglas TukkingtonPsychology, MedicineThe Journal of nervous and mental disease
  • 1991
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