All Stories

  1. Clients with different problems are different and questionnaires are not blood tests: A template analysis of psychiatric and psychotherapy clients' experiences of the CORE‐OM
  2. The Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation-Outcome Measure: A useful option for routine outcome monitoring in Latin America
  3. Psychometric properties of the Chinese version of the clinical outcomes in routine evaluation-outcome measure (CORE-OM)
  4. Trajectories of change of youth depressive symptoms in routine care: shape, predictors, and service-use implications
  5. Development and validation of the relational depth frequency scale
  6. What does research tell us about events that happen to children and adolescents during therapy?
  7. A good practice guide for translating and adapting hearing-related questionnaires for different languages and cultures
  8. The Finnish Clinical Outcome in Routine Evaluation Outcome Measure: psychometric exploration in clinical and non-clinical samples
  9. Psychometric properties of the Finnish version of the Young Person’s Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation (YP-CORE) questionnaire
  10. Psychometric properties of the Spanish version of the Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation – Outcome Measure
  11. Psychometric evaluation of the German version of the revised spontaneity assessment inventory (SAI-R)
  12. Brazilian Portuguese version of the CORE-OM: cross-cultural adaptation of an instrument to assess the efficacy and effectiveness of psychotherapy
  13. YP-CORE
  14. Pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy: the challenges of integrating two paradigms
  15. Craddock and Mynors-Wallis's assault on thinking
  16. The Art Therapy Practice Research Network: Hurdles, pitfalls and achievements
  17. The Individualised Patient-Progress System: A decade of international collaborative networking
  18. Prescribing for personality disorder: qualitative study of interviews with general and forensic consultant psychiatrists
  19. The reliability of British Sign Language and English versions of the Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation - Outcome Measure with d/Deaf populations in the UK: an initial study
  20. Evaluation of the Psychometric Properties of the Icelandic Version of the Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation-Outcome Measure, its Transdiagnostic Utility and Cross-Cultural Validation
  21. Development of a Questionnaire to Assess the Impact of Chronic Low Back Pain for Use in Regulated Clinical Trials
  22. Detecting therapeutic improvement early in therapy: validation of the SCORE-15 index of family functioning and change
  23. Authors' reply
  24. Authors' reply
  25. The factor structure and psychometric properties of the Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation – Outcome Measure (CORE-OM) in Norwegian clinical and non-clinical samples
  26. The CORE-10: A short measure of psychological distress for routine use in the psychological therapies
  27. The CORE‐OM and CORE‐OM (SV) in secure settings: a template analysis of the experiences of male patients and their staff
  28. The Challenges of Translating the Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation-Outcome Measure (CORE-OM) Into British Sign Language
  29. Translating the Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation Outcome Measure (CORE-OM) into Lithuanian
  30. Personality Disorder Traits and Self-Reported Target Problems in a Treatment-Seeking Sample
  31. Psychiatry beyond the current paradigm
  32. A discourse analysis of power in relation to PSYCHLOPS (Psychological outcome profiles) in the context of CBT for psychosis
  33. Validation of the Swedish Version of the Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation Outcome Measure (CORE-OM)
  34. Cautionary notes on power steering for psychotherapy.
  35. Versão Portuguesa do CORE-OM: tradução, adaptação e estudo preliminar das suas propriedades psicométricas
  36. Are problems prevalent and stable in non-clinical populations? Problems and test-retest stability of a patient-generated measure, PSYCHLOPS (Psychological Outcome Profiles), in a non-clinical student sample
  37. Use of psychotropic medication among psychiatric out-patients with personality disorder
  38. Society for Psychotherapy Research
  39. The NICE Depression Guidelines and the recovery model: Is there an evidence base for IAPT?
  40. Validation of the Italian version of the clinical outcomes in routine evaluation outcome measure (CORE-OM)
  41. Review: interpersonal psychotherapy is slightly better and supportive therapy is worse than other therapies for depression
  42. Psychotherapy professionals in the UK: Expansion and experiment
  43. Long-term psychosocial sequelae of stillbirth: phase II of a nested case-control cohort study
  44. Measuring psychological outcomes after cognitive behaviour therapy in primary care: a comparison between a new patient-generated measure “PSYCHLOPS” (Psychological Outcome Profiles) and “HADS” (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale)
  45. Systemic therapies
  46. Social problem-solving plus psychoeducation for adults with personality disorder: Pragmatic randomised controlled trial
  47. Exploratory RCT of art therapy as an adjunctive treatment in schizophrenia
  48. Dimensions of variation on the CORE-OM
  49. Eating disturbance and severe personality disorder: outcome of specialist treatment for severe personality disorder
  50. Dose-effect relations and responsive regulation of treatment duration: The good enough level.
  51. Beauty in the eye of the beholder? How high security hospital psychopathically-disordered patients rate their own interpersonal behaviour
  52. General Population–Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation
  53. Predicting change for individual psychotherapy clients on the basis of their nearest neighbors.
  54. Motivating factors for male forensic patients with personality disorder
  55. The Person's Relating to Others Questionnaire (PROQ2)
  56. Practice-based evidence: benchmarking NHS primary care counselling services at national and local levels
  57. Significance-testing the validity of idiographic methods: A little derangement goes a long way
  58. Psychosocial care of mothers after stillbirth
  59. IS EMPIRICAL RESEARCH COMPATIBLE WITH CLINICAL PRACTICE?
  60. The properties of self-report research measures: Beyond psychometrics
  61. Response to Commentaries by Lorentzen et al., Cohen and Mendelssohn
  62. General psychiatry: cuckoo
  63. Families of homicide victims: Psychiatric responses and help-seeking
  64. Ethnicity and Use of a Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service
  65. Ethnicity and Use of a Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service
  66. Service profiling and outcomes benchmarking using the CORE-OM: Toward practice-based evidence in the psychological therapies.
  67. CORE: Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation
  68. CORE: Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation
  69. Stillbirth as risk factor for depression and anxiety in subsequent pregnancy
  70. PBE and the CORE system
  71. The Unconscious at Work: Individual and Organisational Stress in the Human Serices. Editied by A Obholzer & V. Zagier Roberts
  72. The rationale for developing and outcome batteriesfor routine use in service settings and psychotherapy outcome research implementing core
  73. The management of severe psychiatric disorder: A comparison of the use of neuroleptic medication in two intensive therapy units
  74. Drug abuse in pregnancy: Obstetric and neonatal problems. Ten years' experience
  75. Research Foundations for Psychotherapy Practice. Edited by M. Aveline & D. A. Shapiro
  76. TheBritish Journal of Psychotherapyon the Internet
  77. Neuroleptic drug use in psychiatric intensive therapy units: problems with complying with the consensus statement
  78. The elusive factor1 structure of the Inventory of Interpersonal Problems
  79. Admissions to a close supervision unit. Do patients with repeated short admissions constitute the ‘revolving door’ patients of minimum secure provision?
  80. Funding treatment of offender patients with severe personality disorder. Do financial considerations trump clinical need?
  81. Disordered Eating Behavior and Attitudes in Female and Male Patients With Personality Disorders
  82. Validation of a food-repertory grid with a diabetic population
  83. Body shape questionnaire: Derivation of shortened “alternate forms”
  84. Life with style: A poster series
  85. Therapeutic Community Treatment for Personality Disordered Adults: Changes in Neurotic Symptomatology on Follow-Up
  86. The natural history of disordered eating behavior and attitudes in adult women
  87. Could ‘objective, experimental’ analysis of human motivation really improve psychotherapy?
  88. The Separation-Individuation Inventory
  89. Infertility and eating disorders
  90. Infertility and eating disorders
  91. Some meanings of body and self in eating-disordered and comparison subjects
  92. Family features associated with normal body weight bulimia
  93. Is group psychotherapy feasible for oncology outpatients attenders selected on the basis of psychological morbidity?
  94. Cultural factors in the eating disorders: A study of body shape preferences of Arab students
  95. The Life of D. G. Monrad (1811-1887): Manic-Depressive Disorder and Political Leadership
  96. Family Composition and Social Class in Bulimia A Catchment Area Study of a Clinical and a Comparison Group
  97. The depression screening instrument (DSI): a device for the detection of depressive disorders in general practice
  98. The total score of the Crown-Crisp Experiential Index: A useful and valid measure of psychoneurotic pathology
  99. Life history factors associated with neurotic symptomatology in a rural community sample of 40–49-year-old women
  100. Confidence intervals, medical housing need, and inappropriate statistics
  101. Drug Points: Toxicity of vitamins
  102. The Impulsivist: a multi-impulsive personality disorder
  103. Toxicity of vitamins: complications of a health movement.
  104. PROGNOSTIC UNCERTAINTY IN TERMINAL CARE: CAN THE KARNOFSKY INDEX HELP?
  105. Referral and survival of patients accepted by a terminal care support team.
  106. Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation (CORE)- The CORE Measures and System: Measuring, Monitoring and Managing Quality Evaluation in the Psychological Therapies