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Audit and feedback of therapist-assisted internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy within routine care: A quality improvement case study

With the growing use of ICBT in routine care clinics there is a need for literature on how to monitor and improve the quality of therapist behaviours in clinical practice. In this paper, we first provide background literature on Audit and Feedback (A&F), a common quality improvement technique, a...

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Autores principales: Hadjistavropoulos, Heather D., Williams, Jaime, Adlam, Kelly, Spice, Kerry, Nugent, Marcie, Owens, Katherine M.B., Sundström, Christopher, Dear, Blake F., Titov, Nickolai
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7011000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32071887
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2020.100309
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author Hadjistavropoulos, Heather D.
Williams, Jaime
Adlam, Kelly
Spice, Kerry
Nugent, Marcie
Owens, Katherine M.B.
Sundström, Christopher
Dear, Blake F.
Titov, Nickolai
author_facet Hadjistavropoulos, Heather D.
Williams, Jaime
Adlam, Kelly
Spice, Kerry
Nugent, Marcie
Owens, Katherine M.B.
Sundström, Christopher
Dear, Blake F.
Titov, Nickolai
author_sort Hadjistavropoulos, Heather D.
collection PubMed
description With the growing use of ICBT in routine care clinics there is a need for literature on how to monitor and improve the quality of therapist behaviours in clinical practice. In this paper, we first provide background literature on Audit and Feedback (A&F), a common quality improvement technique, and then present a case study regarding the use of A&F to improve quality of therapist behaviours in emails sent to patients provided with ICBT in routine care. The A&F measure used was derived from previous research on therapist's email behaviours in ICBT. Fifteen undesirable therapist behaviours (e.g., Did Not Message, Unresponsive to Symptom Increase, Does Not Address Patient Concern) were audited in 1840 emails sent from eight therapists to 198 randomly selected patients, representing 18% of 1114 patients who started between one and five lessons of ICBT in the previous year and did not formally withdraw from treatment (n = 31 patients). The therapists who were audited were provided feedback four times over a one-year period from October 2018 to September 2019. Overall, in all audit periods, we found a low percentage of undesirable therapist behaviours (i.e., therapists displayed the behaviour in 12% or less of the total emails sent). For most therapist behaviours, we saw a trend towards improvement across the four audit cycles. Three therapist behaviours (i.e., Failure to Ask One Question to the Patient, Poor Instructions, Not Linking Email to Course Content) did not follow this pattern and were flagged for clinical discussion to determine why behaviours were elevated and whether these behaviours represented unrealistic expectations. The process was valuable for monitoring and improving therapist behaviours and highlights the need for future research on standards for therapist behaviours (e.g., which behaviours to focus on, setting acceptable levels of undesirable behaviour).
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spelling pubmed-70110002020-02-18 Audit and feedback of therapist-assisted internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy within routine care: A quality improvement case study Hadjistavropoulos, Heather D. Williams, Jaime Adlam, Kelly Spice, Kerry Nugent, Marcie Owens, Katherine M.B. Sundström, Christopher Dear, Blake F. Titov, Nickolai Internet Interv Full length Article With the growing use of ICBT in routine care clinics there is a need for literature on how to monitor and improve the quality of therapist behaviours in clinical practice. In this paper, we first provide background literature on Audit and Feedback (A&F), a common quality improvement technique, and then present a case study regarding the use of A&F to improve quality of therapist behaviours in emails sent to patients provided with ICBT in routine care. The A&F measure used was derived from previous research on therapist's email behaviours in ICBT. Fifteen undesirable therapist behaviours (e.g., Did Not Message, Unresponsive to Symptom Increase, Does Not Address Patient Concern) were audited in 1840 emails sent from eight therapists to 198 randomly selected patients, representing 18% of 1114 patients who started between one and five lessons of ICBT in the previous year and did not formally withdraw from treatment (n = 31 patients). The therapists who were audited were provided feedback four times over a one-year period from October 2018 to September 2019. Overall, in all audit periods, we found a low percentage of undesirable therapist behaviours (i.e., therapists displayed the behaviour in 12% or less of the total emails sent). For most therapist behaviours, we saw a trend towards improvement across the four audit cycles. Three therapist behaviours (i.e., Failure to Ask One Question to the Patient, Poor Instructions, Not Linking Email to Course Content) did not follow this pattern and were flagged for clinical discussion to determine why behaviours were elevated and whether these behaviours represented unrealistic expectations. The process was valuable for monitoring and improving therapist behaviours and highlights the need for future research on standards for therapist behaviours (e.g., which behaviours to focus on, setting acceptable levels of undesirable behaviour). Elsevier 2020-02-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7011000/ /pubmed/32071887 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2020.100309 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Full length Article
Hadjistavropoulos, Heather D.
Williams, Jaime
Adlam, Kelly
Spice, Kerry
Nugent, Marcie
Owens, Katherine M.B.
Sundström, Christopher
Dear, Blake F.
Titov, Nickolai
Audit and feedback of therapist-assisted internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy within routine care: A quality improvement case study
title Audit and feedback of therapist-assisted internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy within routine care: A quality improvement case study
title_full Audit and feedback of therapist-assisted internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy within routine care: A quality improvement case study
title_fullStr Audit and feedback of therapist-assisted internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy within routine care: A quality improvement case study
title_full_unstemmed Audit and feedback of therapist-assisted internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy within routine care: A quality improvement case study
title_short Audit and feedback of therapist-assisted internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy within routine care: A quality improvement case study
title_sort audit and feedback of therapist-assisted internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy within routine care: a quality improvement case study
topic Full length Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7011000/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32071887
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.invent.2020.100309
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