Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Anxious Youth with a Disability: a Case Study

Jeremy S. Peterman, Alexandra L. Hoff, Elizabeth Gosch, Philip C. Kendall

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is the first-line psychological intervention for youth with an anxiety disorder. Despite the prevalence of anxiety in youth with physical disabilities, the application and evaluation of CBT for such youth is sparse. The current report illustrates ways to adapt, implement, and evaluate CBT for youth with anxiety and a physical disability describing “Olivia,” a 12-year-old Caucasian female with generalized anxiety disorder, separation anxiety disorder, panic attacks, and cerebral palsy. Olivia received 24 one-hour sessions of outpatient CBT over the course of 9 months. At post-treatment, Olivia no longer met criteria for any anxiety diagnosis by parent- and child-report, with gains maintained at 2-month follow-up. Important therapeutic issues for working with comorbid anxious and physically challenged youth are addressed, such as therapeutic engagement, working within a multidisciplinary team, conflation of psychological and physical symptoms, parental accommodation, family interaction patterns, and modification of exposures and related treatment strategies

Original languageAmerican English
JournalClinical Case Studies
StatePublished - Jan 1 2014

Keywords

  • Cognitive-behavioral therapy
  • anxiety disorder
  • cerebral palsy
  • physical disability
  • anxiety

Disciplines

  • Clinical Psychology

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