학술논문

Measuring Practitioner Attitudes Toward Evidence-Based Treatments: A Validation Study.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Journal of Child & Adolescent Substance Abuse; 2011, Vol. 20 Issue 2, p166-183, 18p
Subject
Attitude (Psychology)
Cognitive therapy
Counselors
Factor analysis
Research methodology
Psychotherapy
Research methodology evaluation
Adolescence
Substance abuse treatment
Medical personnel
Mental health personnel
Psychotherapists
Regression analysis
Research evaluation
Research funding
Evidence-based medicine
Professional practice
Public sector
South Carolina
Language
ISSN
1067828X
Abstract
A better understanding of clinicians' attitudes toward evidence-based treatments (EBT) will presumably enhance the transfer of EBTs for substance-abusing adolescents from research to clinical application. The reliability and validity of two measures of therapist attitudes toward EBT were examined: the Evidence-Based Practice Attitude Scale (Aarons, 2004), and Attitudes Toward Psychotherapy Treatment Manuals Scale (Addis & Krasnow, 2000). Participants included 543 public sector, master's-level mental health and substance abuse therapists who treat adolescents. Factor analyses generally corroborated factor structures of the instruments found previously. Beliefs that EBTs negatively affect treatment process were associated with relatively low openness to new treatments and with beliefs that EBTs do not produce positive outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]