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Psicopatologia Clinica De Fish Pdf 79: Los fundamentos de la psicopatología desde una perspectiva cl

  • gonzalesleon82
  • Aug 16, 2023
  • 3 min read


Although JCCP largely publishes research that is empirical and quantitative in method, rigorous theoretical papers on topics of broad interest to the field of clinical psychology will be considered, as will critical analyses and meta-analyses of treatment approaches on topics of broad theoretical, methodological, or practical interest to the field of clinical psychology.


Viewpoint papers are brief papers about important topics related to consulting and clinical psychology and discuss new developments in research, innovations, weaknesses of the field, and current debates. The goal of Viewpoint papers is to provide a platform for important issues in the field, which are supported by empirical evidence but go beyond that. Viewpoint papers should be brief (no more than 130 lines, including references, no more than 10 references, no abstract, and no more than 3 authors).




Psicopatologia Clinica De Fish Pdf 79




Whereas the majority of papers published in JCCP will involve descriptions of quantitatively-based investigations, this journal also considers conceptual articles on topics of broad theoretical, methodological, or practical interest that advance the field of clinical psychology. Examples might include describing a new methodological or statistical procedure, delineating methods of enhancing dissemination of research findings from the lab to real-world settings, or advocating the need to increase the profession's research efforts regarding a traditionally underserved population.


As of March 1, 2019 registration will be required for all clinical trials (studies designed to examine the efficacy or effectiveness of a treatment or preventive intervention) reporting primary outcome findings. Prospective registration (i.e., pre-registration) is required if recruitment began on or after March 1, 2019. Retrospective registration will be accepted only if recruitment began before this date.


For studies that report randomized clinical trials or meta-analyses, the abstract also must be consistent with the guidelines set forth by JARS or MARS guidelines, respectively. Thus, in preparing a manuscript, please ensure that it is consistent with the guidelines stated below.


The Method section of each empirical report must contain a detailed description of the study participants, including (but not limited to) the following: age, gender, ethnicity, SES, clinical diagnoses and comorbidities (as appropriate), and any other relevant demographics.


JCCP requires the statistical reporting of measures that convey clinical significance. Authors should report means and standard deviations for all continuous study variables and the effect sizes for the primary study findings. (If effect sizes are not available for a particular test, authors should convey this in their cover letter at the time of submission.)


In addition, when reporting the results of interventions, authors should include indicators of clinically significant change. Authors may use one of several approaches that have been recommended for capturing clinical significance, including (but not limited to) the reliable change index (i.e., whether the amount of change displayed by a treated individual is large enough to be meaningful; see Jacobson et al., Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1999), the extent to which dysfunctional individuals show movement into the functional distribution (see Jacobson & Truax, Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1991), or other normative comparisons (see Kendall et al., Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1999).


Articles must include a discussion of the clinical implications of the study findings or analytic review. The discussion section should contain a clear statement of the extent of clinical application of the current assessment, prevention, or treatment methods. The extent of application to clinical practice may range from suggestions that the data are too preliminary to support widespread dissemination to descriptions of existing manuals available from the authors or archived materials that would allow full implementation at present.


For studies that are not clinical trials, preregistration is encouraged, but not required. Preregistration of studies and specific hypotheses can be a useful tool for making strong theoretical claims. Likewise, preregistration of analysis plans can be useful for distinguishing confirmatory and exploratory analyses. Investigators are encouraged to preregister their studies and analysis plans prior to conducting the research (e.g., ClinicalTrials.gov or the Preregistration for Quantitative Research in Psychology template) via a publicly accessible registry system (e.g., OSF, ClinicalTrials.gov, or other trial registries in the WHO Registry Network).


Special issue of APA's Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, Vol. 81, No. 2, April 2013. Includes articles about cultural and translation research considerations in behavioral medicine and clinical health psychology, as well as use in asthma, multiple sclerosis, smoking cessation, HIV/AIDS, cancer, obesity, and hepatitis C. 2ff7e9595c


 
 
 

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