Jill Ehrenreich-May
Published: 2021
Total Pages: 217
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"The Unified Protocols for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders in Children and Adolescents (UP-C/UP-A; Ehrenreich-May et al., 2018) are transdiagnostic interventions designed to address multiple diagnoses, diagnostic categories, and/or problem types within a single treatment protocol. It might be said that modern transdiagnostic interventions originated within the early years of the twenty-first century with theoretical and empirical work by Barlow and colleagues conceptualizing a "unified approach" to understanding and treating emotional disorders (e.g., Barlow, Allen, & Choate, 2004) and, subsequently, the initial publication of the Unified Protocols for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders (Barlow et al., 2011). However, up until the mid-twentieth century, psychotherapeutic approaches were nothing if not transdiagnostic, in that they addressed underlying psychodynamic and interpersonal processes theorized to lead to the development of broad psychological neuroses. This approach changed during the second half of the twentieth century, in accordance with two parallel and mutually informative developments. First, with each new iteration of the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual Mental Disorders (DSM) from the publication of the original DSM in 1952 to DSM-IV in 1994, the number of diagnoses proliferated, and diagnostic criteria became increasingly fine-grained. During the same historical period, new treatments for these highly specified diagnoses were developed based on new empirical and theoretical evidence (e.g., exposure for phobias), and more rigorous outcomes research on cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and other interventions began to emerge (Barlow et al., 2004). Psychotherapy research was conducted using newly-developed treatment manuals addressing symptoms of highly specific diagnoses (e.g., panic disorder, specific phobias) to help ensure scientific rigor and replicability. The turn back toward transdiagnostic models of psychopathology and treatment at the turn of the twenty-first century was based on growing recognition of the commonalities among psychiatric diagnoses, the shared features of psychotherapeutic interventions for distinct diagnoses, and the beneficial effects of treatments for one diagnosis on other diagnoses, which will be further discussed below"--