Why Treatment Works: Psychological and Physiological Mechanisms in the Treatment of Pediatric Mood Disorders

Venue

This is a virtual event, accessible online and over the phone. Access instructions will be provided after registration.

Description

This presentation highlights multiple lines of research that have begun to identify psychological, neurocognitive, and immunological mechanisms of evidence-based psychosocial treatments for pediatric mood disorders, including depression and bipolar disorder. Parent and family factors (e.g., parenting efficacy, family functioning) have been implicated as critical mechanisms in psychosocial treatment for mood disorders. In addition, individual cognitive and biological processes may serve as important mechanisms. For example, executive control is impaired in adolescent depression, compromised during social stress, and linked to immune system impairment and resilience. Furthermore, stressful conditions robustly impair working memory and cognitive flexibility. Treatment protocols with broad efficacy and effectiveness commonly utilized in clinical practice may work in part by directly or indirectly targeting critical psychosocial, cognitive, and biological targets specific to pediatric mood disorders. Understanding mechanisms of treatments enable clinicians to more easily personalize interventions and optimize treatment outcomes. Original webinar date: June 24, 2022. CC.

Learning Objectives: 

1. Explain psychosocial, neurocognitive, and biological mechanisms of evidence-based psychosocial treatments for pediatric mood disorders.

2. Discuss how understanding mechanisms allows for greater personalized clinical care.

Presenters

Victoria Cosgrove, PhD

Dr. Cosgrove is a Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Stanford University School of Medicine. She directs the StrEaM (Stress Responsivity, Emotion, and Mood) Laboratory, focused on studying stress and its involvement in the emergence of mood symptoms in adolescents and teens as well as developing clinical interventions that may help minimize negative responses to stress. She also directs the Family Clinic, which trains graduate students in psychology as well as psychiatry fellows in the specifics of family therapy.

Amy West, PhD

Dr. West is Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Psychology, and Psychiatry & the Behavioral Sciences and Director of the Child Clinical and Pediatric Psychology Internship at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles/Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California. Dr. West’s research program is focused on treatment effectiveness and mechanisms of treatment response in pediatric mood and anxiety disorders, and particularly in diverse, underserved youth. She is the developer of child- and family-focused cognitive-behavioral therapy (CFF-CBT) for pediatric mood disorders.

Continuing Education

Credits:
3.0 CE
Level:
Any
Production Date:
06/24/2022

Options

Price: $80.00

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