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Lista de obras de David Gillanders

A systematic review of the evidence base for Schema Therapy

artículo científico publicado en 2011

An Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)–Based Intervention for an Adult Experiencing Post-Stroke Anxiety and Medically Unexplained Symptoms

An exploration of emotion regulation in psychosis

artículo científico publicado en 2009

An exploration of the main sources of shame in an eating-disordered population.

artículo científico publicado en 2009

Clinical Psychology Training in the UK: Towards the Attainment of Competence

Emotion regulation, affect, psychosocial functioning, and well-being in hemodialysis patients

artículo científico publicado en 2008

Latent Class Analysis of the Short and Long Forms of the Chronic Pain Acceptance Questionnaire: Further Examination of Patient Subgroups.

artículo científico publicado en 2015

Long-term follow-up of pain and emotional characteristics of women after surgery for breast cancer

artículo científico publicado en 2012

Measuring acceptance in irritable bowel syndrome: preliminary validation of an adapted scale and construct utility

artículo científico publicado en 2012

Mental imagery in chronic pain: prevalence and characteristics

artículo científico publicado en 2013

Pain and Depressive Symptoms: Exploring Cognitive Fusion and Self-Compassion in a Moderated Mediation Model

Pain related-visual imagery is associated with distress in chronic pain sufferers

artículo científico publicado en 2012

Rumination, goal linking, daily hassles and life events in major depression

artículo científico publicado en 2010

The development and initial validation of the cognitive fusion questionnaire.

artículo científico publicado en 2013

The mediatory role of maladaptive schema modes between parental care and non-suicidal self-injury

artículo científico publicado en 2013

The utility of the Valuing Questionnaire in Chronic Pain

Trying to make sense of the chaos: Clinical psychologists' experiences and perceptions of clients with ‘borderline personality disorder’