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Extended follow-up of a comprehensive behavioral (ComB) treatment sample during the COVID-19 pandemic

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posted on 2023-08-05, 13:24 authored by Meghan K. Flannery, Allison F. Coyne, Emily J. Carlson, David HaagaDavid Haaga

This study provides the longest follow-up yet for comprehensive behavioral (ComB) treatment of trichotillomania (TTM) (M = 24.59 months after pre-treatment and 15.92 months after the last follow-up point in a recent clinical trial (Carlson et al., 2021), which had shown ComB to be significantly more efficacious than minimal attention at post-treatment). This study also examined changes in TTM severity from before to during the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants (N = 23) completed a survey assessing current TTM symptoms, the impact of the pandemic on their coping with TTM, and their experience with ComB treatment. Self-reported symptom severity at this follow-up evaluation fell between the scores obtained at the clinical trial’s pre-treatment assessment and at its last follow-up before the pandemic and did not significantly differ from either time point. Most participants (73%) reported some change in their TTM management since onset of the pandemic, with changes to their environment/routine (61%) and in anxiety (32%) being the most common. Pandemic-related changes were associated with variable outcomes, improving symptoms and management for some while worsening them for others. Use of strategies from ComB had declined since the most recent follow-up, but more than half (55%) of participants reported that strategies from ComB remained useful.

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Publisher

Elsevier B.V.

Notes

Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders, Volume 32, January 2022, Article number 100706.

Handle

http://hdl.handle.net/1961/auislandora:97049

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