Authors
Aaron Hogue, Sarah Dauber, Emily Lichvar, Molly Bobek, Craig E Henderson
Publication date
2015/3
Journal
Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research
Volume
42
Pages
229-243
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Developing therapist-report fidelity tools to support quality delivery of evidence-based practices in usual care is a top priority for implementation science. This study tested the reliability and accuracy of two groups of community therapists who reported on their use of family therapy (FT) and motivational interviewing/cognitive-behavioral therapy (MI/CBT) interventions during routine treatment of inner-city adolescents with conduct and substance use problems. Study cases (n = 45) were randomized into two conditions: (a) Routine Family Therapy (RFT), consisting of a single site that featured family therapy as its standard of care for behavioral treatment; or (b) Treatment As Usual (TAU), consisting of five sites that featured non-family approaches. Therapists and trained observational raters provided FT and MI/CBT adherence ratings on 157 sessions (104 RFT, 53 TAU). Overall therapist reliability was adequate …
Total citations
2014201520162017201820192020202120222023202423559171720202310