The Behavior Therapist

The Behavior Therapist

ASSOCIATION for BEHAVIORAL and ISSN 0278-8403 ABCT COGNITIVE THERAPIES ▲ VOLUME 40, NO. 5•JUNE 2017 the Behavior Therapist Contents CLINICAL TRAINING Training in Integrated Clinical Tr aining Behavioral Health Care: Ana J. Bridges, Timothy A. Cavell, Carlos A. Ojeda, Samantha J. Gregus, Debbie Gomez Dipping a Toe or Training in Integrated Behavioral Health Care: Diving In Dipping a Toe or Diving In • 169 Clinical Dialogues Ana J. Bridges, Timothy A. Cavell, Ari Lowell and John C. Markowitz Carlos A. Ojeda, Samantha J. Gregus, You Mean I Have to Talk About Feelings? One CBT Therapist’s Debbie Gomez, Experience With Interpersonal Psychotherapy • 181 University of Arkansas Science Forum IT IS ESTIMATED that one out of four individu- als in the United States meets criteria for a psy- R. Trent Codd, III chiatric disorder (Kessler & Wang, 2008), but Protecting the Scientific Lexical Canon • 185 only one-third of those individuals actually receives mental health treatment (Kessler et al., Book Review 2005). Most patients with mental health con- Thad R. Leffingwell and Emma Brett cerns are treated by a primary care physician, Doing CBT Will Help You Do CBT • 191 and this pattern is especially strong among underserved patient populations, including members of ethnic/racial minority groups and News families living in rural areas (Kessler et al.). PeteR J. Norton, Ali Gorji, and International Scientific Committee Mental health care problems are also linked to of the International Anxiety Congress physical health problems in a reciprocal fashion Trauma, Anxiety, and Depression in Iran:A Report From the (World Health Organization, 2004). 3rd International Anxiety Congress in Iran • 192 Health care reform efforts in the U.S. over the past decade were designed to broaden Katherine J. W. Baucom health care coverage and increase patient access Featured Award Recipient: Outstanding Service Award • 194 to needed services, thereby reducing health dis- parities among Americans. Numerous efforts to repeal the Patient Protection and Affordable At ABCT Care Act (111-148) have been unsuccessful and Election Results • 170 it appears the law will remain in effect for the foreseeable future. An important feature of health care reform is the integration of primary CLASSIFIED • 180 medicine and behavioral health into a collabo- rative, interdisciplinary-based team model of service delivery and changes in how health care services are reimbursed, with a greater focus on health promotion, disease prevention, and [continued on p. 171] June • 2017 169 the Behavior Therapist ABCT Published by the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies Election Results 305 Seventh Avenue - 16th Floor New York, NY 10001 | www.abct.org (212) 647-1890 | Fax: (212) 647-1865 Bruce Chorpita, Ph.D. Editor: Kate Wolitzky-Taylor President-Elect, 2017–2018 Editorial Assistant: Bita Mesri Associate Editors RaeAnn Anderson Risa B. Weisberg, Ph.D. Katherine Baucom Representative-at-Large, 2017–2020 Sarah Kate Bearman and liaison to Membership Issues Shannon Blakey Angela Cathey All three bylaw changes were approved: Mission Statement, Purposes, and Trent Codd changes to our membership categories. The membership has voted to revise our mission statement to read: David DiLillo The Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies is a multidisciplinary Lisa Elwood organization committed to the enhancement of health and well-being by advanc- Clark Goldstein ing the scientific understanding, assessment, prevention, and treatment of human David Hansen problems through behavioral, cognitive, and biological evidence-based principles. Katharina Kircanski While ABCT’s name and identity will ensure that we maintain our core focus on Richard LeBeau Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies, the Board hopes that our slightly revised Angela Moreland mission statement will encourage further exploration and collaboration in a Stephanie Mullins-Sweatt broader range of range of mental health areas, including biological mechanisms of behavioral and cognitive therapies. In this way, we seek to foster a welcoming and Amy Murell innovative environment for a range of researchers and clinicians who are passion- Alyssa Ward ate about advancing empirically effective cognitive and behavioral treatments. Tony Wells We are excited about the opportunities that lie ahead. Please join us in congratu- Steven Whiteside lating our new leaders Bruce and Risa. Monnica Williams INSTRUCTIONS Ñçê AUTHORS ABCT President: Gail S. Steketee Executive Director: Mary Jane Eimer The Association for Behavioral and Cog- Submissions must be accompanied by a Director of Education & Meeting Services: nitive Therapies publishes the Behavior Copyright Transfer Form (which can be Linda M. Still Therapist as a service to its membership. downloaded on our website: http://www. Eight issues are published annually. The abct.org/Journals/?m=mJournal&fa=TB Director of Communications: David Teisler purpose is to provide a vehicle for the T): submissions will not be reviewed with- Director of Outreach & Partnerships: rapid dissemination of news, recent out a copyright transfer form. Prior to Tammy Schuler advances, and innovative applications in publication authors will be asked to Managing Editor: Stephanie Schwartz behavior therapy. submit a final electronic version of their Feature articles that are approxi- manuscript. Authors submitting materi- Copyright © 2017 by the Association for Behavioral and mately 16 double-spaced manuscript als to tBT do so with the understanding Cognitive Therapies. All rights reserved. No part of this pub- that the copyright of the published mate- lication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form, or by pages may be submitted. rials shall be assigned exclusively to any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, Brief articles, approximately 6 to 12 recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, ABCT. Electronic submissions are pre- double-spaced manuscript pages, are without permission in writing from the copyright owner. ferred and should be directed to the Subscription information: tBT is published in 8 issues per preferred. year. It is provided free to ABCT members. Nonmember editor, Kate Wolitzky-Taylor, Ph.D., at subscriptions are available at $40.00 per year (+$32.00 air- Feature articles and brief articles [email protected]. Please mail postage outside North America). Change of address: 6 to should be accompanied by a 75- to 8 weeks are required for address changes. Send both old and include the phrase tBT submission and new addresses to the ABCT office. 100-word abstract. the author’s last name (e.g., tBT Submis- ABCT is committed to a policy of equal opportunity in all Letters to the Editor may be used to sion - Smith et al.) in the subject line of of its activities, including employment. ABCT does not dis- criminate on the basis of race, color, creed, religion, national respond to articles published in the your e-mail. Include the corresponding or ethnic origin, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or BehaviOr Therapist oR to voice a pRofes- author’s e-mail address on the cover page expression, age, disability, or veteran status. of the manuscript attachment. Please also All items published in the Behavior Therapist, including sional opinion. Letters should be lim- advertisements, are for the information of our readers, and ited to approximately 3 double-spaced include, as an attachment, the completed publication does not imply endorsement by the Association. manuscript pages. copyright transfer document. 170 TRAINING IN INTEGRATED BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE addressing the behavioral components of little time to address significant barriers The IBHC Model health. The integrated behavioral health that arise when chronic disease regimens Integrated behavioral health care care (IBHC) model represents a paradigm demand fundamental change in a patient’s (IBHC) is a health care delivery model in shift foR health service psychology, one that lifestyle (Robinson & Reiter, 2006). PCPs which diverse health professionals, includ- requires new roles, different skills, and are prone to prescribing action-oriented ing mental health professionals, actively expanded competencies (McDaniel et al., interventions, even though the majority of work together to target patient health care 2014). To keep pace with these changes in patients are not ready to change or have needs (O’Donohue, Cummings, Cucciare, health care delivery, doctoral programs in never contemplated change (Prochaska, Runyan, & Cummings, 2006). While many psychology may want to provide students DiClemente, & Norcross, 1992). PCPs also models of mental and physical health col- with some level of IBHC training. In this prescribe the majority of psychotropic laboration exist (for a review, see Blount, article, we present a framework to guide medications, which introduces additional 1998), the IBHC model strives for the high- programs seeking to add or expand IBHC health care costs and widens further the est level of integration where all a patient’s training, with a particular focus on primary gap between patients who can afford to be needs are addressed in one medical home care psychology or what is called primary treated and those who cannot (Regier et al., by a diverse team of health professionals care behavioral health (Robinson & Reiter, 1993). who can deliver needed care in a single, col- 2006). Although many models of inte- Calls for increased collaboration among laborative system rather than having health grated

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