This project is designed to refine a 6-week telehealth therapy intervention targeting negative interpersonal beliefs among community-dwelling youth with elevated levels of psychopathology. The study design is a single-arm open trial. The intervention is comprised of weekly teen and parent group cognitive-behavioral therapy, regular check-ins with the youths, and a module embedded throughout treatment that targets negative interpersonal beliefs (i.e., perceived social disconnection, burdensomeness). The goal of the study is to evaluate the feasibility of the treatment and assessment protocol, refine the intervention based on qualitative feedback, and evaluate changes in negative interpersonal beliefs. Youths complete two qualitative interviews about their interpersonal relationships and their feedback about the intervention.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
5
Negative interpersonal beliefs are targeted via cognitive-behavioral strategies, including evaluation of cognitive distortions, and activity planning and tracking.
Florida State University
Tallahassee, Florida, United States
Qualitative interview on acceptability
Non-numerical identification of narrative textual themes from interviews.
Time frame: Posttreatment assessment (week 6)
Interpersonal needs questionnaire
A 6 question survey assessing thoughts of being a burden on others. Range of possible scores is 6 to 42. Higher scores indicate more severe thoughts of being a burden on others.
Time frame: Pretreatment (baseline) and week 6
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