2020
Short- and long-term changes in substance-related coping as mediators of in-person and computerized CBT for alcohol and drug use disorders
Roos CR, Carroll KM, Nich C, Frankforter T, Kiluk BD. Short- and long-term changes in substance-related coping as mediators of in-person and computerized CBT for alcohol and drug use disorders. Drug And Alcohol Dependence 2020, 212: 108044. PMID: 32422538, PMCID: PMC7293942, DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.108044.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCognitive behavioral therapyComputerized cognitive behavioral therapyPerson cognitive-behavioural therapySubstance use disordersMediation effectAlcohol use disorderComputer-delivered cognitive behavioural therapyUse disordersSame mediation effectSubstance-related copingCoping Strategies ScaleSignificant mediation effectMechanisms of changeMediational modelCoping skillsStrategies ScaleCBT4CBTStatistical mediatorCopingDrug use disordersSubstance useHeavy drinkingDisordersLong-term changesLong-term increase
2019
Short and long-term improvements in psychiatric symptomatology to validate clinically meaningful treatment outcomes for cocaine use disorders
Miguel AQC, Kiluk BD, Babuscio TA, Nich C, Mari JJ, Carroll KM. Short and long-term improvements in psychiatric symptomatology to validate clinically meaningful treatment outcomes for cocaine use disorders. Drug And Alcohol Dependence 2019, 198: 126-132. PMID: 30921648, PMCID: PMC6487863, DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2019.01.046.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCocaine use disorderBrief Symptom InventoryCocaine use outcomesPsychiatric symptomatologyUse outcomesUse disordersPositive Symptom TotalDrug use outcomesMeaningful treatment outcomesInterpersonal sensitivityUse outcome measuresParanoid ideationSymptom TotalLong-term functional improvementSymptom InventoryLong-term associationPsychoticism dimensionOutcome effectsComposite scoreOutcome measuresSymptomatologyNegative urinalysis resultsGlobal indexComplete abstinenceLong-term improvement
2010
Treatment process, alliance and outcome in brief versus extended treatments for marijuana dependence
Gibbons CJ, Nich C, Steinberg K, Roffman RA, Corvino J, Babor TF, Carroll KM. Treatment process, alliance and outcome in brief versus extended treatments for marijuana dependence. Addiction 2010, 105: 1799-1808. PMID: 20840200, PMCID: PMC3422659, DOI: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2010.03047.x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAmbulatory CareAnalysis of VarianceClinical CompetenceClinical ProtocolsCognitive Behavioral TherapyData Interpretation, StatisticalFemaleGuideline AdherenceHumansMaleMarijuana AbuseMotivationOutcome and Process Assessment, Health CarePhysician-Patient RelationsPsychometricsPsychotherapy, BriefRegression AnalysisTime Factors
2008
Enduring effects of a computer-assisted training program for cognitive behavioral therapy: A 6-month follow-up of CBT4CBT
Carroll KM, Ball SA, Martino S, Nich C, Babuscio TA, Rounsaville BJ. Enduring effects of a computer-assisted training program for cognitive behavioral therapy: A 6-month follow-up of CBT4CBT. Drug And Alcohol Dependence 2008, 100: 178-181. PMID: 19041197, PMCID: PMC2742309, DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2008.09.015.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCognitive behavioral therapyBehavioral therapyComputer-assisted training programSubstance dependenceComputer-based trainingSubstance use outcomesComputer-assisted versionDrug useEnduring effectCBT4CBTUse outcomesRandomized clinical trialsTreatment retentionDurability of effectTraining programOutpatient communityStudy treatmentStandard treatmentOutpatient treatmentClinical trialsTreatment conditionsParticipantsSignificant differencesTreatmentRegression analysis
1997
Now You See It, Now You Don't: A Comparison of Traditional Versus Random-Effects Regression Models in the Analysis of Longitudinal Follow-Up Data From a Clinical Trial
Nich C, Carroll K. Now You See It, Now You Don't: A Comparison of Traditional Versus Random-Effects Regression Models in the Analysis of Longitudinal Follow-Up Data From a Clinical Trial. Journal Of Consulting And Clinical Psychology 1997, 65: 252-261. PMID: 9086688, DOI: 10.1037/0022-006x.65.2.252.Peer-Reviewed Original Research