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Dive into the research topics where Jessica Rasmussen is active.

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Featured researches published by Jessica Rasmussen.


Depression and Anxiety | 2010

Waitlist-controlled trial of cognitive behavior therapy for hoarding disorder.

Gail Steketee; Randy O. Frost; David F. Tolin; Jessica Rasmussen; Timothy A. Brown

Objective: This study investigated a multicomponent cognitive behavioral treatment (CBT) for hoarding based on a model proposed by Frost and colleagues and manualized in Steketee and Frost (2007). Method: Participants with clinically significant hoarding were recruited from the community and a university‐based anxiety clinic. Of the 46 patients randomly assigned to CBT or waitlist (WL), 40 completed the 12‐week assessment and 36 completed 26 sessions. Treatment included education and case formulation, motivational interviewing, skills training for organizing and problem solving, direct exposure to nonacquiring and discarding, and cognitive therapy. Measures included the Saving Inventory‐Revised (self‐report), Hoarding Rating Scale‐Interview, and measures of clinical global improvement. Between group repeated measures analyses using general linear modeling examined the effect of CBT versus WL on hoarding symptoms and moodstate after 12 weeks. Within group analyses examined pre‐post effects for all CBT participants combined after 26 sessions. Results: After 12 weeks, CBT participants benefited significantly more than WL patients on hoarding severity and mood with moderate effect sizes. After 26 sessions of CBT, participants showed significant reductions in hoarding symptoms with large effect sizes for most measures. At session 26, 71% of patients were considered improved on therapist clinical global improvement ratings and 81% of patients rated themselves improved; 41% of completers were clinically significantly improved. Conclusions: Multicomponent CBT was effective in treating hoarding. However, treatment refusal and compliance remain a concern, and further research with independent assessors is needed to establish treatment benefits and durability of gains. Depression and Anxiety, 2010.


Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2013

Hoarding and the multi-faceted construct of impulsivity: A cross-cultural investigation

Kiara R. Timpano; Jessica Rasmussen; Cornelia Exner; Winfried Rief; Norman B. Schmidt; Sabine Wilhelm

The proposed hoarding disorder represents a serious psychiatric condition and considerable public health burden. Although tremendous strides have been made in understanding the phenomenology and treatment of this condition, many features regarding the etiology and nosology remain unclear. In particular, the association between impulsivity and hoarding, as well as the differential role of impulsivity versus compulsivity has yet to be fully considered. The current investigation sought to fill this gap in the literature by examining the relationship between hoarding and impulsivity across two independent, cross-cultural investigations. Two separate conceptualizations of the impulsivity construct were considered, including the Barratt Impulsivity Scale and the UPPS Impulsive Behavior Scale. Across Study 1 (US young adult sample; N = 372) and Study 2 (German young adult sample; N = 160) results revealed that hoarding was associated with greater rates of impulsivity, despite controlling for theoretically relevant covariates. More fined-grained analyses revealed a differential relationship with respect to the various facets of impulsivity, such that hoarding was most strongly linked with attentional and motor impulsivity, as well as urgency (i.e., impulsive behaviors in response to negative affect) and lack of perseverance. When considered simultaneously, both impulsivity and non-hoarding OCD symptoms explained unique variance in hoarding. The implications of impulsivity for hoarding are discussed from a classification perspective, as well as from a vulnerability standpoint.


Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2015

Mindfulness-based stress reduction for Tourette Syndrome and Chronic Tic Disorder: a pilot study.

Hannah E. Reese; Zayda Vallejo; Jessica Rasmussen; Katherine Crowe; Elizabeth Rosenfield; Sabine Wilhelm

OBJECTIVE In this pilot study we sought to develop and test a modified form of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR-tics) for the treatment of Tourette Syndrome (TS) and Chronic Tic Disorder (CTD). Our specific aims were: 1) To determine the feasibility and acceptability of an 8-week trial of MBSR-tics in individuals 16 and older with TS or CTD and 2) To determine the efficacy of an 8-week trial of MBSR-tics in individuals 16 and older with TS or CTD. METHODS Eighteen individuals age 16-67 completed an uncontrolled open trial of MBSR-tics. The intervention consisted of 8 weekly 2-hour classes and one 4hour retreat in the fifth or sixth week of the program. Symptomatic assessments were performed at baseline, post-treatment, and one-month follow-up. RESULTS MBSR-tics proved to be a feasible and acceptable intervention. It resulted in significant improvement in tic severity and tic-related impairment. 58.8% of subjects were deemed treatment responders. Therapeutic gains were maintained at 1-month follow-up. Improvements in tic severity were correlated with increases in self-reported levels of mindfulness. CONCLUSIONS This small open pilot study provides preliminary support for the feasibility, acceptability, and efficacy of MBSR-tics for individuals 16 or older with TS or CTD. A larger randomized controlled trial with blind assessment is necessary to confirm these initial, promising findings. Trial Registration Partners Clinical Trials Registry Number 2011P000606 (clinicaltrials.partners.org).


Journal of Cognitive Psychotherapy | 2013

The Relationship of Hoarding Symptoms to Schizotypal Personality and Cognitive Schemas in an OCD Sample.

Jessica Rasmussen; Gail Steketee; Michelle Silverman; Sabine Wilhelm

This study examined hoarding symptoms and schizotypal personality traits (SPTs) in 38 patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and explored early maladaptive schemas (EMSs) as partial mediators between hoarding symptoms and schizotypal traits in OCD. Hoarding and symmetry/ordering symptoms were correlated with total schizotypal score on the Personality Disorder Questionnaire-4 (PDQ-4). Hoarding predicted the total number of schizotypal traits on the PDQ-4 after adjusting for symmetry/ordering symptoms. Schizotypal traits but not hoarding symptoms were significantly correlated with the social isolation and mistrust/abuse schemas. Schizotypal traits and hoarding were both associated with the emotional inhibition and emotional deprivation schemas, but neither of these mediated the relationship between schizotypal traits and hoarding. Clinical implications for understanding and treating hoarding and schizotypal personality in OCD are discussed.


Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry | 2016

Scrupulosity and Contamination OCD are not Associated with Deficits in Response Inhibition

Jessica Rasmussen; Jedidiah Siev; Amitai Abramovitch; Sabine Wilhelm

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Prior research has indicated a number of neuropsychological deficits in patients with OCD consistent with the cortico-striato-thalamo-cortical model of the disorder. Response inhibition (RI), defined as the inability to inhibit a prepotent response, has been identified as a possible candidate endophenotype for OCD. However, the results from previous studies of RI in OCD patients have been mixed, suggesting the possibility that some OCD dimensions may be associated with deficits in RI while others may not. The present study aimed to examine RI using a Go/No-Go (GNG) task in two OCD symptom dimensions, one of which, scrupulosity, has never been subject to neuropsychological investigation. METHODS A total of 63 individuals, consisting of scrupulous OCD (n = 26), contamination OCD (n = 18) and non-psychiatric controls (n = 19) completed study measures. Controlling for depression symptoms, no significant performance differences were found between the groups on the GNG test, indicating no deficits in RI among contamination or scrupulous OCD. RESULTS Results are consistent with several prior studies of RI in OCD that found no differences as compared to non-psychiatric controls, especially on GNG tests, and with more recent suggestions that RI may not constitute a clinical significant impaired domain in OCD. LIMITATIONS Limitations included a primarily highly educated and Caucasian sample. CONCLUSIONS Additional conclusions include careful consideration of the RI measures selected for future studies, as well as the need for further investigation into the neuropsychological and neurobiological nature of scrupulous OCD.


Community Mental Health Journal | 2014

Assessing Squalor in Hoarding: The Home Environment Index

Jessica Rasmussen; Gail Steketee; Randy O. Frost; David F. Tolin; Timothy Brown


Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders | 2013

Impulsivity in hoarding

Jessica Rasmussen; Timothy A. Brown; Gail Steketee; David H. Barlow


Cognitive and Behavioral Practice | 2010

Ethical Considerations in the Treatment of Compulsive Hoarding

Amanda K. Gibson; Jessica Rasmussen; Gail Steketee; Randy O. Frost; David F. Tolin


Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders | 2014

The association between metacognitions, the obsessive compulsive symptom dimensions and hoarding: A focus on specificity

Kiara R. Timpano; Jessica Rasmussen; Cornelia Exner; Winfried Rief; Sabine Wilhelm


American Journal of Psychiatry | 2012

Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders: Refining the Research Agenda for DSM-Vedited by Hollander Eric , M.D., Zohar Joseph , M.D., Sirovatka Paul J. , M.S., and Regier Darrel A. , M.D., M.P.H. Washington, DC , American Psychiatric Publishing , 2011 , 257 pp.,

Jessica Rasmussen; Sabine Wilhelm

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J. C. Slimowicz

Nova Southeastern University

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Jedidiah Siev

Nova Southeastern University

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