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Dive into the research topics where Julie Loebach Wetherell is active.

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Featured researches published by Julie Loebach Wetherell.


Annual Review of Clinical Psychology | 2009

Depression in older adults

Amy Fiske; Julie Loebach Wetherell; Margaret Gatz

Depression is less prevalent among older adults than among younger adults, but it can have serious consequences. More than half of cases represent a first onset in later life. Although suicide rates in the elderly are declining, they are still higher than in younger adults and are more closely associated with depression. Depressed older adults are less likely to endorse affective symptoms and more likely to display cognitive changes, somatic symptoms, and loss of interest than are depressed younger adults. Risk factors leading to the development of late-life depression likely comprise complex interactions among genetic vulnerabilities, cognitive diathesis, age-associated neurobiological changes, and stressful events. Insomnia is an often overlooked risk factor for late-life depression. We suggest that a common pathway to depression in older adults, regardless of which predisposing risks are most prominent, may be curtailment of daily activities. Accompanying self-critical thinking may exacerbate and maintain a depressed state. Offsetting the increasing prevalence of certain risk factors in late life are age-related increases in psychological resilience. Other protective factors include higher education and socioeconomic status, engagement in valued activities, and religious or spiritual involvement. Treatments including behavioral therapy, cognitive-behavioral therapy, cognitive bibliotherapy, problem-solving therapy, brief psychodynamic therapy, and life review/reminiscence therapy are effective but are too infrequently used with older adults. Preventive interventions including education for individuals with chronic illness, behavioral activation, cognitive restructuring, problem-solving skills training, group support, and life review have also received support.


Pain | 2011

A randomized, controlled trial of acceptance and commitment therapy and cognitive-behavioral therapy for chronic pain

Julie Loebach Wetherell; Niloofar Afari; Thomas Rutledge; John T. Sorrell; Jill A. Stoddard; Andrew J. Petkus; Brittany C. Solomon; David H. Lehman; Lin Liu; Ariel J. Lang; J. Hampton Atkinson

Summary Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) and cognitive‐behavioral therapy are both effective for pain interference and mood in chronic pain patients; ACT may be more satisfactory. ABSTRACT Individuals reporting chronic, nonmalignant pain for at least 6 months (N = 114) were randomly assigned to 8 weekly group sessions of acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) or cognitive‐behavioral therapy (CBT) after a 4–6 week pretreatment period and were assessed after treatment and at 6‐month follow‐up. The protocols were designed for use in a primary care rather than specialty pain clinic setting. All participants remained stable on other pain and mood treatments over the course of the intervention. ACT participants improved on pain interference, depression, and pain‐related anxiety; there were no significant differences in improvement between the treatment conditions on any outcome variables. Although there were no differences in attrition between the groups, ACT participants who completed treatment reported significantly higher levels of satisfaction than did CBT participants. These findings suggest that ACT is an effective and acceptable adjunct intervention for patients with chronic pain.


Psychology and Aging | 2007

Evidence-based psychological treatments for late-life anxiety

Catherine R. Ayers; John T. Sorrell; Steven R. Thorp; Julie Loebach Wetherell

This project identified evidence-based psychotherapy treatments for anxiety disorders in older adults. The authors conducted a review of the geriatric anxiety treatment outcome literature by using specific coding criteria and identified 17 studies that met criteria for evidence-based treatments (EBTs). These studies reflected samples of adults with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) or samples with mixed anxiety disorders or symptoms. Evidence was found for efficacy for 4 types of EBTs. Relaxation training, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), and, to a lesser extent, supportive therapy and cognitive therapy have support for treating subjective anxiety symptoms and disorders. CBT for late-life GAD has garnered the most consistent support, and relaxation training represents an efficacious, relatively low-cost intervention. The authors provide a review of the strengths and limitations of this research literature, including a discussion of common assessment instruments. Continued investigation of EBTs is needed in clinical geriatric anxiety samples, given the small number of available studies. Future research should examine other therapy models and investigate the effects of psychotherapy on other anxiety disorders, such as phobias and posttraumatic stress disorder in older adults.


Psychological Assessment | 2003

Assessing worry in older adults: Confirmatory factor analysis of the Penn State Worry Questionnaire and psychometric properties of an abbreviated model

Derek R. Hopko; Melinda A. Stanley; Deborah L. Reas; Julie Loebach Wetherell; J. Gayle Beck; Diane M. Novy; Patricia M. Averill

The assessment of worry among older adults typically has involved measures designed with younger cohorts. Because of special concerns in assessing older adults, modifications to existing instruments may be necessary. Addressing equivocal factor analytic data on the Penn State Worry Questionnaire (PSWQ) among younger adults, the authors conducted confirmatory factor analyses to evaluate the generalizability of previous models to older adults with generalized anxiety disorder. Data fit poorly with established single- and two-factor models. The single-factor model was modified, resulting in the elimination of 8 items, strong fit indices, high internal consistency, adequate test-retest reliability, and good convergent and divergent validity. Further psychometric work is required to assess whether the revised model is a more parsimonious method to assess late-life anxiety.


International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2010

Age at onset and clinical features of late life compulsive hoarding

Catherine R. Ayers; Sanjaya Saxena; Shahrokh Golshan; Julie Loebach Wetherell

Compulsive hoarding is a debilitating, chronic disorder, yet we know little about its onset, clinical features, or course throughout the life span. Hoarding symptoms often come to clinical attention when patients are in late life, and case reports of elderly hoarders abound. Yet no prior study has examined whether elderly compulsive hoarders have early or late onset of hoarding symptoms, whether their hoarding symptoms are idiopathic or secondary to other conditions, or whether their symptoms are similar to compulsive hoarding symptoms seen in younger and middle‐aged populations. The objectives of this study were to determine the onset and illustrate the course and clinical features of late life compulsive hoarding, including psychiatric and medical comorbitities.


Psychology and Aging | 2003

DSM-IV criteria for generalized anxiety disorder in older adults: Distinguishing the worried from the well

Julie Loebach Wetherell; Hillary Le Roux; Margaret Gatz

This study compared 36 older adults with generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), 22 older adults with subsyndromal anxiety symptoms, and 32 normal controls on criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed.) for GAD. GAD patients reported more frequent and uncontrollable worry, somewhat different worry content, higher prevalence of most associated symptoms, and more distress or impairment than the subsyndromal group or normal controls. Individuals with subsyndromal anxiety reported more excessive, frequent, and uncontrollable worry than asymptomatic individuals, along with more sleep disturbance, fatigue, and distress or impairment. Results indicate that the key features of late-life GAD are distress and impairment, frequency and uncontrollability of worry, muscle tension, and sleep disturbance and that clinicians treating older adults with GAD should monitor and treat residual symptoms.


Behavior Therapy | 2011

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for Generalized Anxiety Disorder in Older Adults: A Preliminary Report

Julie Loebach Wetherell; Lin Liu; Thomas L. Patterson; Niloofar Afari; Catherine R. Ayers; Steven R. Thorp; Jill A. Stoddard; Joshua L. Ruberg; Alexander Kraft; John T. Sorrell; Andrew J. Petkus

Some evidence suggests that acceptance-based approaches such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) may be well-suited to geriatric generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). The primary goal of this project was to determine whether ACT was feasible for this population. Seven older primary-care patients with GAD received 12 individual sessions of ACT; another 9 were treated with cognitive-behavioral therapy. No patients dropped out of ACT, and worry and depression improved. Findings suggest that ACT may warrant a large-scale investigation with anxious older adults.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2009

Meta-Analysis Comparing Different Behavioral Treatments for Late-Life Anxiety

Steven R. Thorp; Catherine R. Ayers; Roberto Nuevo; Jill A. Stoddard; John T. Sorrell; Julie Loebach Wetherell

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the efficacy of different types of behavioral treatments for geriatric anxiety (cognitive behavior therapy [CBT] alone, CBT with relaxation training [RT], and RT alone). METHOD The authors compared effect sizes from 19 trials. Analyses were based on uncontrolled outcomes (comparing posttreatment and pretreatment scores) and effects relative to control conditions on both anxiety and depressive symptoms. RESULTS Treatments for older adults with anxiety symptoms were, on average, more effective than active control conditions. Effect sizes were comparable to those reported elsewhere for CBT for anxiety in the general population or for pharmacotherapy in anxious older adults. CBT (alone or augmented with RT) does not seem to add anything beyond RT alone, although a direct comparison is challenging given differences in control conditions. Effects on depressive symptoms were smaller, with no differences among treatment types. CONCLUSION Results suggest that behavioral treatments are effective for older adults with anxiety disorders and symptoms. Results must be interpreted with caution given the limitations of the literature, including differing sample characteristics and control conditions across studies.


Journal of Holistic Nursing | 2008

A Spiritually Based Group Intervention for Combat Veterans With Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Feasibility Study

Jill E. Bormann; Steven R. Thorp; Julie Loebach Wetherell; Shahrokh Golshan

Purpose: To assess the feasibility, effect sizes, and satisfaction of mantram repetition—the spiritual practice of repeating a sacred word/phrase throughout the day—for managing symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in veterans. Design: A two group (intervention vs. control) by two time (pre- and postintervention) experimental design was used. Methods: Veterans were randomly assigned to intervention (n = 14) or delayed-treatment control (n = 15). Measures were PTSD symptoms, psychological distress, quality of life, and patient satisfaction. Effect sizes were calculated using Cohens d. Findings: Thirty-three male veterans were enrolled, and 29 (88%) completed the study. Large effect sizes were found for reducing PTSD symptom severity (d = –.72), psychological distress (d = –.73) and increasing quality of life (d = –.70). Conclusions: A spiritual program was found to be feasible for veterans with PTSD. They reported moderate to high satisfaction. Effect sizes show promise for symptom improvement but more research is needed.


International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine | 2004

Mental health treatment preferences of older and younger primary care patients

Julie Loebach Wetherell; Robert M. Kaplan; Gene A. Kallenberg; Timothy R. Dresselhaus; William J. Sieber; Ariel J. Lang

Objective: To compare mental health treatment history and preferences in older and younger primary care patients. Method: We surveyed 77 older (60+) and 312 younger adult primary care patients from four outpatient medical clinics about their mental health treatment history and preferences. Results: Older adults were less likely than younger adults to report a history of mental health treatment (29% vs. 51%) or to be currently receiving treatment (11% vs. 23%). They were also less likely to indicate that they currently desire help with emotional problems (25% vs. 50%). Older adults were more likely to hold a belief in self-reliance that could limit their willingness to accept treatment for mental health problems, although they were less likely than younger adults to identify other barriers to treatment. Older adults reported that they were less likely to attend programs in primary care targeting mental health issues (counseling, stress management) than younger adults, although they were as willing as younger adults to attend programs targeting physical health issues (healthy living class, fitness program). Age remained a significant predictor of mental health treatment history and preferences even after controlling for other demographic variables. Conclusion: These results suggest that older adults in the primary care setting may be less willing to accept mental health services than younger adults. Results further suggest that perceived barriers may differ for older and younger patients, which may indicate the need for age-specific educational messages and services targeted to older adults in primary care.

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Andrew J. Petkus

University of Southern California

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Eric J. Lenze

Washington University in St. Louis

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Margaret Gatz

University of Southern California

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Lin Liu

University of California

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Emily S. Bower

San Diego State University

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Melinda A. Stanley

University of Texas at Austin

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