| Literature DB >> 28865284 |
Rinad Beidas1, Laura Skriner2, Danielle Adams3, Courtney Benjamin Wolk4, Rebecca E Stewart5, Emily Becker-Haimes6, Nathaniel Williams7, Brenna Maddox8, Ronnie Rubin9, Shawna Weaver10, Arthur Evans11, David Mandell12, Steven C Marcus13.
Abstract
We investigated the relationship between consumer, clinician, and organizational factors and clinician use of therapy strategies within a system-wide effort to increase the use of cognitive-behavioral therapy. Data from 247 clinicians in 28 child-serving organizations were collected. Clinicians participating in evidence-based practice training initiatives were more likely to report using cognitive-behavioral therapy when they endorsed more clinical experience, being salaried clinicians, and more openness to evidence-based practice. Clinicians participating in evidence-based practice initiatives were more likely to use psychodynamic techniques when they had older clients, less knowledge about evidence-based practice, more divergent attitudes toward EBP, higher financial strain, and worked in larger organizations. In clinicians not participating in evidence-based training initiatives; depersonalization was associated with higher use of cognitive-behavioral; whereas clinicians with less knowledge of evidence-based practices were more likely to use psychodynamic techniques. This study suggests that clinician characteristics are important when implementing evidence-based practices; and that consumer, clinician, and organizational characteristics are important when de-implementing non evidence-based practices. This work posits potential characteristics at multiple levels to target with implementation and deimplementation strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive-behavioral therapy; Evidence-based practice; Implementation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28865284 PMCID: PMC5681428 DOI: 10.1016/j.brat.2017.08.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Res Ther ISSN: 0005-7967