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    Lines 1352-1449, Regiment of Princes Collation Tables Group MITCH 4

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    Files in this work belong to a collection of handwritten variant tables compiled by Charles Blyth and a team consisting of David Greetham, Jerome Mitchell, Gail Sigal, Peter Farley, Marcia Marzec, and David Yerkes during the 1980s and 1990s to collate the manuscripts of Thomas Hoccleve's fifteenth-century poem, 'The Regiment of Princes.' Blyth used these tables to help produce his 1999 edition of the poem published by TEAMS. Blyth passed this collection to Elon Lang in 2009. Lang set up the Hoccleve Archive in 2012 at UT-Austin to preserve and publish the collation tables, to collect other materials related to Hoccleve and Hoccleve scholarship, and to develop strategies for building and using digital archives and editions.Digital images of the variant collation tables in this work were produced by UTAustin Liberal Arts ITS staff member Emma Whelan, Rebecca van Kniest, and members of the UT-School of Information Fall 2012 Digitization Methods class when their names are included in a dc.contributer field. Tables are identified in the title field by a line number range from Blyth's edition of 'The Regiment of Princes.' Transcriptions of marginal glosses associated with some lines in the source manuscripts are written on verso sides of these collation tables or on subsequent sheets. Images of these versos or subsequent sheets are identified by suffices appended to the 'table0000' filename.Humanitie

    A Randomized Controlled Trial of Adjunctive Family Therapy and Treatment as Usual Following Inpatient Treatment for Anorexia Nervosa Adolescents

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    UNLABELLED: Research on treatments in anorexia nervosa (AN) is scarce. Although most of the therapeutic programs used in 'real world practice' in AN treatment resort to multidisciplinary approaches, they have rarely been evaluated. OBJECTIVE: To compare two multidimensional post-hospitalization outpatients treatment programs for adolescents with severe AN: Treatment as Usual (TAU) versus this treatment plus family therapy (TAU+FT). METHOD: Sixty female AN adolescents, aged 13 to 19 years, were included in a randomized parallel controlled trial conducted from 1999 to 2002 for the recruitment, and until 2004 for the 18 months follow-up. Allocation to one of the two treatment groups (30 in each arm) was randomised. The TAU program included sessions for the patient alone as well as sessions with a psychiatrist for the patient and her parents. The TAU+FT program was identical to the usual one but also included family therapy sessions targeting intra-familial dynamics, but not eating disorder symptoms. The main Outcome Measure was the Morgan and Russell outcome category (Good or Intermediate versus Poor outcome). Secondary outcome indicators included AN symptoms or their consequences (eating symptoms, body mass index, amenorrhea, number of hospitalizations in the course of follow-up, social adjustment). The evaluators, but not participants, were blind to randomization. RESULTS: At 18 months follow-up, we found a significant group effect for the Morgan and Russell outcome category in favor of the program with family therapy (Intention-to-treat: TAU+FT :12/30 (40%); TAU : 5/29 (17.2%) p = 0.05; Per Protocol analysis: respectively 12/26 (46.2%); 4/27 (14.8%), p = 0.01). Similar group effects were observed in terms of achievement of a healthy weight (i.e., BMI≥10(th) percentile) and menstrual status. CONCLUSIONS: Adding family therapy sessions, focusing on intra-familial dynamics rather than eating symptomatology, to a multidimensional program improves treatment effectiveness in girls with severe AN. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Controlled-trials.com ISRCTN71142875
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