efficacy
(noun)
Ability to produce a desired amount of a desired effect.
Examples of efficacy in the following topics:
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Body-Oriented Psychotherapies
- Research across eight different schools of body-oriented therapies suggests overall efficacy in symptom reduction, though more research is needed.
- The review of outcome research across different types of body-oriented psychotherapy concludes that the best evidence supports efficacy for treating somatoform/psychosomatic disorders and schizophrenia.
- Many of the claims regarding the efficacy of body-oriented therapies are considered controversial due to lack of research.
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Introduction to Biomedical Therapies
- Two ways in which biological therapies are studied are through efficacy research and effectiveness studies.
- Placebo-controlled randomized clinical trials, using strict exclusionary criteria when selecting subjects, have traditionally been used to study a psychiatric medication's efficacy (i.e., the ability of the medication to treat the condition better than placebo under controlled conditions).
- Effectiveness studies are complementary to understanding drug efficacy.
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Psychosurgery
- Psychosurgery has a low rate of efficacy relative to the risks of the procedures.
- The reason for the decline of psychosurgery was not only related to ethical concerns and the low rates of efficacy; it was also related to the advancement of more effective and minimally invasive treatments such as psychiatric medications.
- Discuss the goals, techniques, and efficacy of various types of psychosurgery
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Maintaining Motivation
- Rogers, suggests that we protect ourselves based on four factors: (1) the perceived severity of a threatening event, (2) the perceived probability of the occurrence or vulnerability, (3) the efficacy of the recommended preventive behavior, and (4) the perceived self-efficacy.
- Self-efficacy, the final factor in PMT, is the belief in one's ability to carry out the recommended course of action successfully.
- A social support system provides encouragement and self-efficacy, helps maintain a positive outlook, and allows an individual to talk about and find ways to deal with the stressor.
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Temporal Motivation Theory
- Expectancy, or self-efficacy, is the likelihood of success; value is the reward associated with the outcome; impulsiveness is the individual's ability to withstand urges; and delay is the amount of time until the realization of the outcome (i.e., the deadline).
- Suppose the student really doesn't understand the material and doesn't feel confident that he will be able to grasp it in time for the exam (low self-efficacy, or expectancy).
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Electroconvulsive Therapy
- It has different levels of efficacy depending on the disorder it is called on to treat.
- There is a lack of clinical evidence for its efficacy but it has been used successfully in the treatment of this disorder.
- Discuss the goals, techniques, and efficacy of electroconvulsive therapy for various psychological disorders
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Psychodynamic and Psychoanalytic Therapy
- Meta-analyses in 2012 and 2013 found evidence for the efficacy of psychoanalytic therapy; other meta-analyses published in recent years showed psychoanalysis and psychodynamic therapy to be effective, with outcomes comparable to or greater than other kinds of psychotherapy or antidepressant drugs.
- Numerous studies have suggested that its efficacy is related to the quality of the therapist, rather than the particular school, technique, or training.
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Research Methods for Evaluating Treatment Efficacy
- RCTs are often used to test the efficacy or effectiveness of various types of medical intervention and may provide information about adverse effects, such as drug reactions.
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Other Approaches to Therapy
- Studies have demonstrated the efficacy of art therapy, as applied to clients with memory loss due to Alzheimer’s and other diseases, stroke residuals, traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression, dealing with chronic illness, and aging.
- Discuss the goals, techniques, and efficacy of expressive and systemic therapies
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Criticisms of the Social-Cognitive Pespective on Personality
- For example, researchers currently cannot find a connection between observational learning and self-efficacy within the social-cognitive perspective.