A comparison of CBT and EMDR for sexually abused Iranian girls
Fourteen randomly assigned Iranian girls ages 12–13 years who had been sexually abused received up to 12 sessions of CBT or EMDR treatment.
Article Abstract
“Fourteen randomly assigned Iranian girls ages 12–13 years who had been sexually abused received up to 12 sessions of CBT or EMDR treatment. Assessment of post-traumatic stress symptoms and problem behaviours was completed at pre-treatment and 2 weeks post-treatment. Both treatments showed large effect sizes on the post-traumatic symptom outcomes, and a medium effect size on the behaviour outcome, all statistically significant. A non-significant trend on self-reported post-traumatic stress symptoms favoured EMDR over CBT. Treatment efficiency was calculated by dividing change scores by number of sessions; EMDR was significantly more efficient, with large effect sizes on each outcome. Limitations include small N, single therapist for each treatment condition, no independent verification of treatment fidelity, and no long-term follow-up. These findings suggest that both CBT and EMDR can help girls to recover from the effects of sexual abuse, and that structured trauma treatments can be applied to children in Iran.”
—Description from publisher
Article Access
Purchase/Subscription Required
Jaberghaderi, N., Greenwald, R., Rubin, A., Dolatabadim, S., & Zand, S. O. (2004). A comparison of CBT and EMDR for sexually abused Iranian girls. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 11, 358-368. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.395
Date
September 17, 2004
Creator(s)
Nasrin Jaberghaderi, Ricky Greenwald, Allen Rubin
Contributor(s)
Shahin Oliaee Zand, Shiva Dolatabadi
Topics
Abuse/Neglect, Sexual Trauma
Client Population
Adolescents, Children
Practice & Methods
Comparative Studies
Extent
11 pages
Publisher
Wiley
Rights
Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
APA Citation
Jaberghaderi, N., Greenwald, R., Rubin, A., Dolatabadim, S., & Zand, S. O. (2004). A comparison of CBT and EMDR for sexually abused Iranian girls. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 11, 358-368. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.395
Audience
EMDR Therapists, Other Mental Health Professionals
Language
English
Content Type
Article, Peer-Reviewed, RCT
Access Type
External Resource