2014
DOI: 10.1037/a0036158
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Evaluating therapist adherence in motivational interviewing by comparing performance with standardized and real patients.

Abstract: Objective The goal of measuring therapist adherence is to determine if a therapist can perform a given treatment. Yet the evaluation of therapist behaviors in most clinical trials is limited. Typically, randomized trials have few therapists and minimize therapist variability through training and supervision. Furthermore, therapist adherence is confounded with uncontrolled differences in patients across therapists. Consequently, the extent to which adherence measures capture differences in actual therapist adhe… Show more

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Cited by 71 publications
(76 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
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“…It is rare for a CE program for mental health professionals to assess clinical skill via a simulation despite frequent use in medical education programs [38]. To our knowledge, only one training program has used confederate patients (CP) in assessing skills learned by mental health professionals [39]. In that study, ratings of therapists' use of motivational interviewing skills for addiction with CPs were similar to those with "live" patients, indicating that CPs could be a valid strategy for assessing therapist skills.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is rare for a CE program for mental health professionals to assess clinical skill via a simulation despite frequent use in medical education programs [38]. To our knowledge, only one training program has used confederate patients (CP) in assessing skills learned by mental health professionals [39]. In that study, ratings of therapists' use of motivational interviewing skills for addiction with CPs were similar to those with "live" patients, indicating that CPs could be a valid strategy for assessing therapist skills.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In many therapies, such therapy delivery skills reflect how clinicians respond verbally to clients. Several validated skill assessment methods simulate this using standardized clinical stimuli—in the form a live standardized patient (Imel et al, 2014; Stimmel, Cohen, Fallar, & Smith, 2006), pre-recorded video clips (Baer et al, 2012; Rosengren, Hartzler, Baer, Wells, & Dunn, 2008), or written vignettes (Miller et al, 1991). A shared attribute of these methods is the opportunity they provide to measure targeted aspects of clinician verbal behavior when the clinician is given a consequence-free opportunity to rehearse communicative skills.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One notable exception has been the development of virtual standardized clients, which are conversational agents that simulate symptoms of various mental health conditions [27]. We believe that the relative lack of attention given to training and assessment is an unfortunate oversight, because most psychotherapy will continue to be delivered by human counselors for the foreseeable future, and at present, the quality of psychotherapy in the community is highly variable [22]. …”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%