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Journals Annual Review of Clinical Psyc...

Annual Review of Clinical Psychology

https://read.qxmd.com/read/36854286/acculturation-and-psychopathology
#21
REVIEW
Gail M Ferguson, José M Causadias, Tori S Simenec
Acculturation and psychopathology are linked in integrated, interactional, intersectional, and dynamic ways that span different types of intercultural contact, levels of analysis, timescales, and contexts. A developmental psychopathology approach can be useful to explain why, how, and what about psychological acculturation results in later adaptation or maladaptation for acculturating youth and adults. This review applies a conceptual model of acculturation and developmental psychopathology to a widely used framework of acculturation variables producing an Integrated Process Framework of Acculturation Variables (IP-FAV)...
May 9, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36791766/developmental-consequences-of-intimate-partner-violence-on-children
#22
REVIEW
G Anne Bogat, Alytia A Levendosky, Kara Cochran
Numerous studies associate childhood exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) with adverse adjustment in the domains of mental health, social, and academic functioning. This review synthesizes this literature and highlights the critical role of child self-regulation in mediating children's adjustment outcomes. We discuss major methodological problems of the field, including failure to consider the effects of prenatal IPV exposure and the limitations of variable-oriented and cross-sectional approaches. Finally, we present a comprehensive theoretical model of the effects of IPV on children's development...
May 9, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36791765/psychoneuroimmunology-an-introduction-to-immune-to-brain-communication-and-its-implications-for-clinical-psychology
#23
REVIEW
Julienne E Bower, Kate R Kuhlman
Research conducted over the past several decades has revolutionized our understanding of the role of the immune system in neural and psychological development and function across the life span. Our goal in this review is to introduce this dynamic area of research to a psychological audience and highlight its relevance for clinical psychology. We begin by introducing the basic physiology of immune-to-brain signaling and the neuroimmune network, focusing on inflammation. Drawing from preclinical and clinical research, we then examine effects of immune activation on key psychological domains, including positive and negative valence systems, social processes, cognition, and arousal (fatigue, sleep), as well as links with psychological disorders (depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, anxiety, schizophrenia)...
May 9, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36750264/risk-and-resilience-among-children-with-incarcerated-parents-a-review-and-critical-reframing
#24
REVIEW
Elizabeth I Johnson, Joyce A Arditti
Parental incarceration is a significant, inequitably distributed form of adversity that affects millions of US children and increases their risk for emotional and behavioral problems. An emerging body of research also indicates, however, that children exhibit resilience in the context of parental incarceration. In this article, we review evidence regarding the adverse implications of parental incarceration for children's adjustment and consider factors that account for these consequences with special attention to naturally occurring processes and interventions that may mitigate risk and contribute to positive youth development...
May 9, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36750262/what-four-decades-of-meta-analysis-have-taught-us-about-youth-psychotherapy-and-the-science-of-research-synthesis
#25
REVIEW
John R Weisz, Katherine E Venturo-Conerly, Olivia M Fitzpatrick, Jennifer A Frederick, Mei Yi Ng
Intervention scientists have published more than 600 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of youth psychotherapies. Four decades of meta-analyses have been used to synthesize the RCT findings and identify scientifically and clinically significant patterns. These meta-analyses have limitations, noted herein, but they have advanced our understanding of youth psychotherapy, revealing ( a ) mental health problems for which our interventions are more and less successful (e.g., anxiety and depression, respectively); ( b ) the beneficial effects of single-session interventions, interventions delivered remotely, and interventions tested in low- and middle-income countries; ( c ) the association of societal sexism and racism with reduced treatment benefit in majority-girl and majority-Black groups; and, importantly, ( d ) the finding that average youth treatment benefit has not increased across five decades of research, suggesting that new strategies may be needed...
May 9, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36608332/mental-health-of-transgender-and-gender-diverse-youth
#26
REVIEW
Natalie M Wittlin, Laura E Kuper, Kristina R Olson
Transgender and gender diverse (TGD) children and adolescents are an increasingly visible yet highly stigmatized group. These youth experience more psychological distress than not only their cisgender, heterosexual peers but also their cisgender, sexual minority peers. In this review, we document these mental health disparities and discuss potential explanations for them using a minority stress framework. We also discuss factors that may increase and decrease TGD youth's vulnerability to psychological distress...
May 9, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36480930/supernatural-attributions-seeing-god-the-devil-demons-spirits-fate-and-karma-as-causes-of-events
#27
REVIEW
Julie J Exline, Joshua A Wilt
For many people worldwide, supernatural beliefs and attributions-those focused on God, the devil, demons, spirits, an afterlife, karma, or fate-are part of everyday life. Although not widely studied in clinical psychology, these beliefs and attributions are a key part of human diversity. This article provides a broad overview of research on supernatural beliefs and attributions with special attention to their psychological relevance: They can serve as coping resources, sources of distress, psychopathology signals, moral guides, and decision-making tools...
May 9, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36888999/racism-and-social-determinants-of-psychosis
#28
REVIEW
Deidre M Anglin
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has identified racism as a serious threat to public health. Structural racism is a fundamental cause of inequity within interconnected institutions and the social environments in which we live and develop. This review illustrates how these ethnoracial inequities impact risk for the extended psychosis phenotype. Black and Latinx populations are more likely than White populations to report psychotic experiences in the United States due to social determining factors such as racial discrimination, food insecurity, and police violence...
March 8, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36854287/culturally-responsive-cognitive-behavioral-therapy-for-ethnically-diverse-populations
#29
REVIEW
Stanley J Huey, Alayna L Park, Chardée Galán, Crystal X Wang
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is often referred to as the "gold standard" treatment for mental health problems, given the large body of evidence supporting its efficacy. However, there are persistent questions about the generalizability of CBTs to culturally diverse populations and whether culturally sensitive approaches are warranted. In this review, we synthesize the literature on CBT for ethnic minorities, with an emphasis on randomized trials that address cultural sensitivity within the context of CBT...
February 28, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36854285/posttraumatic-stress-disorder-in-refugees
#30
REVIEW
Richard A Bryant, Angela Nickerson, Naser Morina, Belinda Liddell
The number of refugees and internally displaced people in 2022 is the largest since World War II, and meta-analyses demonstrate that these people experience elevated rates of mental health problems. This review focuses on the role of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in refugee mental health and includes current knowledge of the prevalence of PTSD, risk factors, and apparent differences that exist between PTSD in refugee populations and PTSD in other populations. An emerging literature on understanding mechanisms of PTSD encompasses neural, cognitive, and social processes, which indicate that these factors may not function exactly as they have functioned previously in other PTSD populations...
February 28, 2023: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36475718/evaluation-of-pressing-issues-in-ecological-momentary-assessment
#31
REVIEW
Arthur A Stone, Stefan Schneider, Joshua M Smyth
The use of repeated, momentary, real-world assessment methods known as the Experience Sampling Method and Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) has been broadly embraced over the last few decades. These methods have extended our assessment reach beyond lengthy retrospective self-reports as they can capture everyday experiences in their immediate context, including affect, behavior, symptoms, and cognitions. In this review we evaluate nine conceptual, methodological, and psychometric issues about EMA with the goal of stimulating conversation and guiding future research on these matters: the extent to which participants are actually reporting momentary experiences, respondents' interpretation of momentary questions, the use of comparison standards in responding, efforts to increase the EMA reporting period beyond the moment to longer periods within a day, training of EMA study participants, concerns about selection bias of respondents, the impact of missing EMA assessments, the reliability of momentary data, and for which purposes EMA might be considered a gold standard for assessment...
December 7, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35534123/allostasis-action-and-affect-in-depression-insights-from-the-theory-of-constructed-emotion
#32
REVIEW
Clare Shaffer, Christiana Westlin, Karen S Quigley, Susan Whitfield-Gabrieli, Lisa Feldman Barrett
The theory of constructed emotion is a systems neuroscience approach to understanding the nature of emotion. It is also a general theoretical framework to guide hypothesis generation for how actions and experiences are constructed as the brain continually anticipates metabolic needs and attempts to meet those needs before they arise (termed allostasis). In this review, we introduce this framework and hypothesize that allostatic dysregulation is a trans-disorder vulnerability for mental and physical illness...
May 9, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35534122/temperamental-and-theoretical-contributions-to-clinical-psychology
#33
REVIEW
Jerome Kagan
This review considers two themes. The first section describes the influence of two temperamental biases detectable in infants that render children vulnerable to maladaptive behavior if the rearing environment invites such responses. Infants who display high levels of limb activity and crying in response to unexpected events are likely to be shy and fearful as children and are at risk for an anxiety disorder. Infants who display little limb movement and crying are susceptible to assuming risks and vulnerable to asocial behavior if the rearing environment invites these actions...
May 9, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35534121/neuroplasticity-the-prefrontal-cortex-and-psychopathology-related-deviations-in-cognitive-control
#34
REVIEW
Monica Luciana, Paul F Collins
A basic survival need is the ability to respond to, and persevere in the midst of, experiential challenges. Mechanisms of neuroplasticity permit this responsivity via functional adaptations (flexibility), as well as more substantial structural modifications following chronic stress or injury. This review focuses on prefrontally based flexibility, expressed throughout large-scale neuronal networks through the actions of excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters and neuromodulators. With substance use disorders and stress-related internalizing disorders as exemplars, we review human behavioral and neuroimaging data, considering whether executive control, particularly cognitive flexibility, is impaired premorbidly, enduringly compromised with illness progression, or both...
May 9, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35534120/the-genetic-environmental-and-cultural-forces-influencing-youth-antisocial-behavior-are-tightly-intertwined
#35
REVIEW
S Alexandra Burt
The aggressive and rule-breaking behaviors that constitute youth antisocial behavior (ASB) are shaped by intertwined genetic, developmental, familial, spatial, temporal, cultural, interpersonal, and contextual influences operating across multiple levels of analysis. Genetic influences on ASB, for example, manifest in different ways during different developmental periods, and do so in part as a function of exposure to harsh parenting, delinquent peers, and disadvantaged neighborhoods. There is also clear evidence documenting societal effects, time-period effects, sex-assigned-at-birth effects, and cohort effects, all of which point to prominent (and possibly interconnected) cultural influences on ASB...
May 9, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35226824/dissociation-and-dissociative-disorders-reconsidered-beyond-sociocognitive-and-trauma-models-toward-a-transtheoretical-framework
#36
REVIEW
Steven Jay Lynn, Craig Polizzi, Harald Merckelbach, Chui-De Chiu, Reed Maxwell, Dalena van Heugten, Scott O Lilienfeld
For more than 30 years, the posttraumatic model (PTM) and the sociocognitive model (SCM) of dissociation have vied for attention and empirical support. We contend that neither perspective provides a satisfactory account and that dissociation and dissociative disorders (e.g., depersonalization/derealization disorder, dissociative identity disorder) can be understood as failures of normally adaptive systems and functions. We argue for a more encompassing transdiagnostic and transtheoretical perspective that considers potentially interactive variables including sleep disturbances; impaired self-regulation and inhibition of negative cognitions and affects; hyperassociation and set shifts; and deficits in reality testing, source attributions, and metacognition...
May 9, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35216524/differences-disorders-of-sex-development-medical-conditions-at-the-intersection-of-sex-and-gender
#37
REVIEW
David E Sandberg, Melissa Gardner
Defined as congenital conditions in which development of chromosomal, gonadal, or anatomic sex is atypical, differences or disorders of sex development (DSDs) comprise many discrete diagnoses ranging from those associated with few phenotypic differences between affected and unaffected individuals to those where questions arise regarding gender of rearing, gonadal tumor risk, genital surgery, and fertility. Controversies exist in numerous areas including how DSDs are conceptualized, how to refer to the set of conditions and those affected by them, and aspects of clinical management that extend from social media to legislative bodies, courts of law, medicine, clinical practice, and scholarly research in psychology and sociology...
May 9, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35216523/training-the-next-generation-of-clinical-psychological-scientists-a-data-driven-call-to-action
#38
REVIEW
Dylan G Gee, Kathryn A DeYoung, Katie A McLaughlin, Rachael M Tillman, Deanna M Barch, Erika E Forbes, Robert F Krueger, Timothy J Strauman, Mariann R Weierich, Alexander J Shackman
The central goal of clinical psychology is to reduce the suffering caused by mental health conditions. Anxiety, mood, psychosis, substance use, personality, and other mental disorders impose an immense burden on global public health and the economy. Tackling this burden will require the development and dissemination of intervention strategies that are more effective, sustainable, and equitable. Clinical psychology is uniquely poised to serve as a transdisciplinary hub for this work. But rising to this challengerequires an honest reckoning with the strengths and weaknesses of current training practices...
May 9, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35216522/psychosocial-treatments-for-bipolar-disorder-in-children-and-adolescents
#39
REVIEW
Haley M Brickman, Mary A Fristad
Evidence suggests that adjunctive psychosocial intervention for the treatment of pediatric bipolar spectrum disorders (BPSDs) is effective, feasible, and highly accepted as both an acute and maintenance treatment for youth with BPSD diagnoses as well as a preventive treatment for high-risk youth who are either asymptomatic or exhibit subsyndromal mood symptoms. Here, we provide a comprehensive review of all known evidence-based interventions, including detailed descriptions of treatment targets and core components, results of clinical trials, and updated research on mediators and moderators of treatment efficacy...
May 9, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35216521/the-biopsychosocial-puzzle-of-painful-sex
#40
REVIEW
Marta Meana, Yitzchak M Binik
Genital pain associated with sex is a prevalent and distressing problem with a complex research and clinical profile. This article reviews the historical context of the "sexual pain disorders" and the circuitous trajectory that has led from the first mention of painful sex in ancient documents to the latest diagnostic category of genito-pelvic pain penetration disorder in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders as well as in other existing and proposed nomenclatures. Prominent etiologic research and emergent theoretical models are critically assessed, as is the latest treatment outcome research of note...
May 9, 2022: Annual Review of Clinical Psychology
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