Mechanisms of change in cognitive behavioral therapy for panic disorder: The unique effects of self-efficacy and anxiety sensitivity |
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Authors: | Matthew W. Gallagher Laura A. Payne Kamila S. White Katherine M. Shear Scott W. Woods Jack M. Gorman David H. Barlow |
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Affiliation: | 1. Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders at Boston University, United States;2. David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California Los Angeles, United States;3. University of Missouri – St. Louis, United States;4. Columbia University School of Social Work, United States;5. Yale University, United States;6. Franklin Behavioral Health Consultants, United States |
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Abstract: | The present study examined temporal dependencies of change of panic symptoms and two promising mechanisms of change (self-efficacy and anxiety sensitivity) during an 11-session course of cognitive-behavior therapy (CBT) for Panic Disorder (PD). 361 individuals with a principal diagnosis of PD completed measures of self-efficacy, anxiety sensitivity, and PD symptoms at each session during treatment. Effect size analyses indicated that the greatest changes in anxiety sensitivity occurred early in treatment, whereas the greatest changes in self-efficacy occurred later in treatment. Results of parallel process latent growth curve models indicated that changes in self-efficacy and anxiety sensitivity across treatment uniquely predicted changes in PD symptoms. Bivariate and multivariate latent difference score models indicated, as expected, that changes in anxiety sensitivity and self-efficacy temporally preceded changes in panic symptoms, and that intraindividual changes in anxiety sensitivity and self-efficacy independently predicted subsequent intraindividual changes in panic symptoms. These results provide strong evidence that changes in self-efficacy and anxiety sensitivity during CBT influence subsequent changes in panic symptoms, and that self-efficacy and anxiety sensitivity may therefore be two distinct mechanisms of change of CBT for PD that have their greatest impact at different stages of treatment. |
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Keywords: | Panic disorder Mechanisms of change CBT Self-efficacy Anxiety sensitivity Latent difference score |
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