Dysfunctional Cognitions
Cross-source consensus on Dysfunctional Cognitions from 2 sources and 11 claims.
2 sources · 11 claims
Uses
How it works
Benefits
Preparation
Evidence quality
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- The article defines dysfunctional cognitions as negative automatic thoughts, maladaptive beliefs, and distorted interpretations related to threat, control, vulnerability, trauma, compulsive fears, or anxiety symptoms. — Investigating dysfunctional cognition change as a putative mechanism of CBT for youth anxiety, OCD and PTSD: protocol for an individual participant data meta-analysis
- The primary aim is to test whether pre-to-post treatment reductions in dysfunctional cognitions predict child-reported and clinician-rated clinical improvement. — Investigating dysfunctional cognition change as a putative mechanism of CBT for youth anxiety, OCD and PTSD: protocol for an individual participant data meta-analysis
- Eligible dysfunctional cognition measures assess negative automatic thoughts, maladaptive beliefs, or distorted interpretations relevant to anxiety, OCD, or PTSD in youth. — Investigating dysfunctional cognition change as a putative mechanism of CBT for youth anxiety, OCD and PTSD: protocol for an individual participant data meta-analysis
- Dysfunctional cognitions are the putative mechanism through which the protocol will test whether CBT improves youth anxiety, OCD, and PTSD outcomes. — Investigating dysfunctional cognition change as a putative mechanism of CBT for youth anxiety, OCD and PTSD: protocol for an individual participant data meta-analysis
- Dysfunctional cognition scores will be standardised with z-scores, and multiple validated measures within a study will be averaged into one composite cognition score. — Investigating dysfunctional cognition change as a putative mechanism of CBT for youth anxiety, OCD and PTSD: protocol for an individual participant data meta-analysis
- The protocol notes that youth evidence linking dysfunctional cognition reductions with symptom improvement is limited and inconsistent. — Investigating dysfunctional cognition change as a putative mechanism of CBT for youth anxiety, OCD and PTSD: protocol for an individual participant data meta-analysis
- Maladaptive beliefs tied to a medical label should be targeted when they prevent progress. — Heel-Elevated Squats, Pelvic Floor Mechanics, and Medical Labels
- Educational interventions should be applied when a specific belief is identified as limiting rehabilitation tasks. — Heel-Elevated Squats, Pelvic Floor Mechanics, and Medical Labels
- Progress can occur even if the medical condition remains part of the person's identity. — Heel-Elevated Squats, Pelvic Floor Mechanics, and Medical Labels
- Identification with a medical label should be evaluated for whether it is the major rate-limiting step to progress. — Heel-Elevated Squats, Pelvic Floor Mechanics, and Medical Labels