Johanna M. Meyer
University of Wollongong
14 Papers
55 Citations
Johanna M. Meyer is an academic researcher from University of Wollongong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Exposure therapy & Anxiety. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 13 publications. Previous affiliations of Johanna M. Meyer include University of Florida & University of Sydney.
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Papers
Why do clinicians exclude anxious clients from exposure therapy
TL;DR: Greater likelihood of excluding clients from exposure was associated with higher therapist anxiety sensitivity and endorsement of negative beliefs about exposure therapy, and training implications of these findings are discussed.
146
ADHD Knowledge, Perceptions, and Information Sources: Perspectives From a Community Sample of Adolescents and Their Parents
Regina Bussing,Bonnie T. Zima,Dana M. Mason,Johanna M. Meyer,Kimberly G. White,Cynthia Garvan +5 more
TL;DR: Culturally appropriate psychoeducational strategies are needed that combine doctor-provided ADHD information with reputable Internet sources despite time limitations during patient visits, both parents and teens place high priority on receiving information from their doctor.
131
Prospective Relationship Between Obsessive–Compulsive and Depressive Symptoms During Multimodal Treatment in Pediatric Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder
Johanna M. Meyer,Joseph P. H. McNamara,Adam M. Reid,Eric A. Storch,Gary R. Geffken,Dana M. Mason,Tanya K. Murphy,Regina Bussing +7 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that when treating youth with OCD with co-occurring depression, therapists should begin by treating obsessive–compulsive symptoms, as when these are targeted effectively, depressive symptoms diminish as well.
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Childhood ADHD Symptoms: Association with Parental Social Networks and Mental Health Service Use during Adolescence
TL;DR: Raising children with ADHD appears to significantly impact parental social network experiences, and reduced spousal support and overall lower network support levels may contribute to high caregiver strain commonly reported among parents of ADHD youth.
Predictive Relationship Between Parental Beliefs and Accommodation of Pediatric Anxiety.
Johanna M. Meyer,Joshua D. Clapp,Stephen P. Whiteside,Julie Dammann,Kathryn D. Kriegshauser,Lisa R. Hale,David M. Jacobi,Bradley C. Riemann,Brett J. Deacon +8 more
TL;DR: Efforts to decrease accommodation in clinical settings should involve correcting maladaptive parental beliefs about accommodation, with a particular emphasis on beliefs regarding the necessity of accommodation in preventing a youth from losing behavioral and emotional control.
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