All Stories

  1. The Connections Matter: Bi-Directional Learning in Program Evaluation and Practice-Oriented Research
  2. Daily prediction of nonsuicidal self-injury among inpatients: The roles of suicidal thoughts, interpersonal difficulties, hopelessness, and affect.
  3. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation: Course and early prediction of response in depression
  4. Illustrating routine outcomes monitoring at different points in a patient's journey: Inpatient then daypatient treatment of a patient with depressive and borderline symptoms
  5. Screening for depressive symptoms in adolescence: A Rasch analysis of the short-form childhood depression inventory-2 (CDI 2:SR[S])
  6. BIS sensitivity, BAS sensitivity, and recent suicide attempts
  7. A Short-Form Measure of Loneliness to Predict Depression Symptoms Among Adolescents
  8. An experimental investigation of the influence of loneliness on changes in belongingness and desire to escape
  9. A comprehensive group‐based cognitive behavioural treatment for blood‐injection‐injury phobia
  10. Distress tolerance as a moderator of the dynamic associations between interpersonal needs and suicidal thoughts
  11. Development of the Perth Adolescent Worry Scale (PAWS)
  12. Association between COVID-19 and inpatient self-harm
  13. Outcomes of brief versions of Dialectical Behaviour Therapy for diagnostically heterogeneous groups in a routine care setting
  14. Allowing nondisclosure in surveys with suicide content: Characteristics of nondisclosure in a national survey of emergency services personnel.
  15. An exploration of the relationships between patient application of CBT skills and therapeutic outcomes during a two-week CBT treatment
  16. Prevalence and predictors of suicidal thoughts and behaviours among Australian police and emergency services employees
  17. Factors differentiating adolescents who consider suicide and those who attempt: Results from a National Survey of Australian Adolescents
  18. Prediction and network modelling of self-harm through daily self-report and history of self-injury
  19. Severity of borderline personality disorder symptoms as a moderator of the association between the use of dialectical behaviour therapy skills and treatment outcomes
  20. Progress monitoring and feedback delivered in routine psychiatric care: Beneficial but not reaching those thought to need it most
  21. Alternatives to Suicide
  22. Daily monitoring of the wish to live and the wish to die with suicidal inpatients
  23. Zest for life
  24. Delivering cognitive behaviour therapy informed by a contemporary framework of psychotherapy treatment selection and adaptation
  25. Assessing interpersonal and mood factors to predict trajectories of suicidal ideation within an inpatient setting
  26. Dynamic Changes in a Desire to Escape from Interpersonal Adversity: A Fluid Experimental Assessment of the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide
  27. Post-migration treatment targets associated with reductions in depression and PTSD among survivors of torture seeking asylum in the USA
  28. Experimentally-enhanced perceptions of meaning confer resilience to the interpersonal adversity implicated in suicide risk
  29. Depressive ruminators are able to update and do not 'cling' to negative (mis)information
  30. Neuroticism confers vulnerability in response to experimentally induced feelings of thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness: Implications for suicide risk
  31. The benefits and risks of asking research participants about suicide: A meta-analysis of the impact of exposure to suicide-related content
  32. Daily assessment of interpersonal factors to predict suicidal ideation and non-suicidal self-injury in psychiatric inpatients.
  33. A comparison between the clinical significance and growth mixture modelling early change methods at predicting negative outcomes
  34. Mind full of life: Does mindfulness confer resilience to suicide by increasing zest for life?
  35. Relationships Between Quality of Care, Empowerment, and Outcomes in Psychiatric Inpatients
  36. Impaired memory updating associated with impaired recall of negative words in dysphoric rumination—Evidence for a removal deficit
  37. Methods of Delivering Progress Feedback to Optimise Patient Outcomes: The Value of Expected Treatment Trajectories
  38. ECT Modality and health related quality of life outcomes after ECT for depression
  39. A Brief Mindfulness Intervention Attenuates Desire to Escape Following Experimental Induction of the Interpersonal Adversity Implicated in Suicide Risk
  40. An Experimental Test of the ‘Interpersonal’ in the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide
  41. Health Related Quality of Life after ECT for depression: A study exploring the role of different electrode-placements and pulse-widths
  42. Using daily monitoring of psychiatric symptoms to evaluate hospital length of stay
  43. Multifacet assessment of capability for suicide: Development and prospective validation of the Acquired Capability With Rehearsal for Suicide Scale.
  44. Mindfulness and zest for life buffer the negative effects of experimentally-induced perceived burdensomeness and thwarted belongingness: Implications for theories of suicide.
  45. Validity of clinically significant change classifications yielded by Jacobson-Truax and Hageman-Arrindell methods
  46. Therapist Effects on and Predictors of Non-Consensual Dropout in Psychotherapy
  47. Deficits in joint action explain why socially anxious individuals are less well liked
  48. The structure of negative emotional states in a postpartum inpatient sample
  49. Detecting the severity of perinatal anxiety with the Perinatal Anxiety Screening Scale (PASS)
  50. Identifying risk of deliberate self-harm through longitudinal monitoring of psychological distress in an inpatient psychiatric population
  51. Daily monitoring of temporal trajectories of suicidal ideation predict self-injury: A novel application of patient progress monitoring
  52. Does the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale measure the same constructs across time?
  53. Effects of providing domain specific progress monitoring and feedback to therapists and patients on outcome
  54. The Perinatal Anxiety Screening Scale: development and preliminary validation
  55. Daily Index-5
  56. Development and psychometrics of the five item daily index in a psychiatric sample
  57. Clinical Psychology for Trainees
  58. Assessing clinical significance of treatment outcomes using the DASS-21.
  59. The structure of emotional symptoms in the postpartum period: Is it unique?
  60. The influence of individual, group, and relative self-esteem on outcome for patients undergoing group cognitive-behavioural therapy treatment
  61. Effectiveness of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Modified for Inpatients with Depression
  62. Interpersonal problems across anxiety, depression, and eating disorders: A transdiagnostic examination
  63. How consistent are clinical significance classifications when calculation methods and outcome measures differ?
  64. Readmission to Psychiatric Hospital After Treatment for Depression With Electroconvulsive Therapy
  65. Management of fear of radiation exposure in carers of outpatients treated with iodine-131
  66. Improving clinical outcomes in psychiatric care with touch-screen technology.
  67. The effects of progress monitoring on subsequent readmission to psychiatric care: A six-month follow-up
  68. Anxiety Reactivity Perseveration Scale
  69. Anxiety reactivity and anxiety perseveration represent dissociable dimensions of trait anxiety.
  70. ‘Painting a path to wellness’: correlations between participating in a creative activity group and improved measured mental health outcome
  71. Progress monitoring and feedback in psychiatric care reduces depressive symptoms
  72. Readmission: A useful indicator of the quality of inpatient psychiatric care
  73. Listeners influence speakers’ perceived communication effectiveness
  74. Attempted suppression of social threat thoughts: Differential effects for social phobia and healthy controls?
  75. Routine measurement of outcomes by Australian private hospital-based psychiatric services
  76. Modifiability of Neuroticism, Extraversion, and Agreeableness by Group Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder
  77. Monitoring treatment response and outcomes using the World Health Organization's Wellbeing Index in psychiatric care
  78. Bridging the gap between best evidence and best practice in mental health
  79. The value of adding the Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire to outcome assessments of psychiatric inpatients with mood and affective disorders
  80. Best Practices: Increased Attendance in Inpatient Group Psychotherapy Improves Patient Outcomes
  81. Confirming the Three-Factor Structure of the Disgust Scale—Revised in Eight Countries
  82. The subscale structure and clinical utility of the Health of the Nation Outcome Scale
  83. Speaker overestimation of communication effectiveness and fear of negative evaluation: Being realistic is unrealistic
  84. Erratum
  85. Toward science-informed supervision of clinical case formulation: A training model and supervision method
  86. Effects of internal and external distraction and focus during exposure to blood-injury-injection stimuli
  87. Psychometric properties of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS) in depressed clinical samples
  88. Defense Mechanisms After Brief Cognitive-Behavior Group Therapy for Panic Disorder
  89. Client-Focused Research: New Directions in Outcome Assessment
  90. Evaluating the clinical significance of responses by psychiatric inpatients to the mental health subscales of the SF-36
  91. Respecting the humanity of clients: cross-cultural and ethical aspects of practice
  92. Assessment of distress and burden in Australian private psychiatric inpatients
  93. Assessment of Distress and Burden in Australian Private Psychiatric Inpatients
  94. The role of cognitions, trait anxiety and disgust sensitivity in generating faintness around blood–injury phobic stimuli
  95. Clinical Psychology for Trainees
  96. Identifying and targeting predictors of drop-out from group cognitive behaviour therapy
  97. Outcome Measurement, Outcome Management and Monitoring
  98. Outcome measurement, outcome management and monitoring
  99. Corrigendum to “The five-factor model and personality disorder empirical literature: A meta-analytic review” [Clinical Psychology Review 23 (2004) 1055–1085]
  100. A methodology for timing reviews of inpatient hospital stay
  101. A Methodology for Timing Reviews of Inpatient Hospital Stay
  102. Performance-Related Beliefs in Social Phobia: Why Social Phobics Perceive Performance Requirements as Exceeding Their Abilities
  103. An Online Measure of Thought Suppression.
  104. Failure to replicate the effects of gender and season on the length of hospitalisation in unipolar depressives
  105. Attention to phobic stimuli during exposure: the effect of distraction on anxiety reduction, self-efficacy and perceived control
  106. Survey of West Australian anxiety support group participants' views on treatment processes and outomes
  107. The five-factor model and personality disorder empirical literature: A meta-analytic review
  108. Outcomes for Depressed and Anxious Inpatients Discharged Before or After Group Cognitive Behavior Therapy
  109. Fear reduction during in vivo exposure to blood‐injection stimuli: Distraction vs. attentional focus
  110. The role of disgust in faintness elicited by blood and injection stimuli
  111. Can trait measures diagnose personality disorders?
  112. Predicting Outcomes of Group Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Patients with Affective and Neurotic Disorders
  113. Nature and treatment of panic disorder
  114. Measuring Mental Health Outcomes in a Private Psychiatric Clinic: Health of the Nation Outcome Scales and Medical Outcomes Short Form SF-36
  115. Constant Versus Rhythmic Muscle Tension in Applied Tension
  116. Effects of Images on the Renewal of Blood-Injury Fear
  117. Effects of images about fear and disgust upon responses to blood-injury phobic stimuli
  118. The effect of distraction on within-session anxiety reduction during brief in vivo exposure for mild blood-injection fears
  119. Testing a genetic structure of blood-injury-injection fears
  120. Assessment of panic disorder
  121. Case-based training for applications in the clinical and behavioural sciences
  122. Influenza epidemics and incidence of schizophrenia, affective disorders and mental retardation in Western Australia: no evidence of a major effect
  123. The Blood-Injection Symptom Scale (BISS): Assessing a structure of phobic symptoms elicited by blood and injections
  124. Influenza epidemics and the incidence of CNS disorders in Western Australia 1950-1960
  125. The Scientist-practitioner model: More faces than eve
  126. Do Specific Anxiety Disorders Show Specific Drug Problems?
  127. Blood–injury–injection fears in medical practice
  128. Distinguishing Panic Disorder and Agoraphobia from Social Phobia
  129. Panic Provocation in the Treatment of Agoraphobia: A Preliminary Investigation
  130. The “medicinal effect”: A possible mechanism in the development of severe alcohol dependence
  131. Blood-injury phobia
  132. Eye-Movement Desensitisation: A Simple Treatment for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder?
  133. Eye-Movement Desensitisation: A Simple Treatment for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder?
  134. To whom should cognitive-behaviour therapies be taught?
  135. An assessment of structured diagnostic interviews for adult anxiety disorders
  136. Simple phobias
  137. Teaching developmentally disabled people self-regulation in sexual behaviour
  138. Warm Turkey: Other routes to abstinence
  139. Preface
  140. References
  141. Supervision
  142. A science-informed model of clinical psychology practice
  143. Relating with clients
  144. Linking assessment to treatment: case formulation
  145. Assessing clients
  146. Treating clients
  147. Group treatment
  148. Programme evaluation
  149. Case management
  150. Managing treatment non-compliance
  151. Working in rural and remote settings
  152. Psychologists as health care providers
  153. Useful resources
  154. Electronic Patient Monitoring in Mental Health Services
  155. Electronic Patient Monitoring in Mental Health Services
  156. Disgust and blood-injury-injection phobia.
  157. Preface
  158. Supervision
  159. References
  160. Elicited Emotions to Pain, Nausea, and Frustration Scripts
  161. Relating with clients
  162. Assessing clients
  163. Monitoring client progress
  164. Linking assessment to treatment
  165. Treating clients
  166. Brief interventions
  167. Group treatment
  168. Programme evaluation
  169. Case management
  170. Respecting the humanity of clients
  171. Psychologists as health care providers
  172. Electronic Patient Monitoring in Mental Health Services