“…A common focus is the assessment of change using standardized outcome monitoring. This involves tracking or predicting the progress of individual, large groups, or specific types of clients (Adelman, Castonguay, Kraus, & Zack, 2014;Boswell, Kraus, Miller, & Lambert, 2014;Castonguay, Pincus, & McAleavey, 2014;Fernández-Álvarez, Gómez, & García, 2014;Holmqvist, Philips, & Barkham, 2014;Koerner & Castonguay, 2014;McAleavey, Lockard, Castonguay, Hayes, & Locke, 2014;Strauss et al, 2014;West et al, 2014). The use of outcome monitoring in day-to-day practice has allowed some of these programs to investigate a number of issues related to specific patterns of change (such as dose-effect and good enough models, predictors of differential response patterns, sudden changes, deterioration, and therapist-client responsiveness), as well as the impact of providing feedback and clinical tools to therapists based on client change.…”