Daydreamer and Night Owl: Comparing Positive and Negative Outcome Cases in an Online, Clinician-Guided, Self-Help Intervention for Social Anxiety Disorder
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14713/pcsp.v13i3.2012Keywords:
Social Anxiety Disorder, Internet-Based CBT Treatment (ICBT), cognitive-behavioral treatment, clinician-guided self-help, clinical case studies, case studiesAbstract
Internet-Based Cognitive-Behavior Treatment (ICBT) has garnered strong empirical support in the last decade. However, despite the growing body of evidence that web-based treatments work, there are still a considerable number of clients who do not benefit sufficiently from such interventions. Recently, research has started to focus on identifying factors that affect treatment outcome and adherence to Internet interventions. To explore the difference between clients who are successful versus unsuccessful in response to ICBT, this article presents two systematic case studies that describe the course of treatment of a positive-outcome client (named "Daydreamer") and a more negative outcome client (named "Night Owl") in clinician-guided ICBT for Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD). We present focal points of therapist communication, as well as the clientsDownloads
Published
11/12/2017
How to Cite
Schulz, A., Vincent, A., & Berger, T. (2017). Daydreamer and Night Owl: Comparing Positive and Negative Outcome Cases in an Online, Clinician-Guided, Self-Help Intervention for Social Anxiety Disorder. Pragmatic Case Studies in Psychotherapy, 13(3), 217–252. https://doi.org/10.14713/pcsp.v13i3.2012
Issue
Section
Case Study
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