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Training Public Sector Clinicians in Competency-Based Clinical Supervision: Methods, Curriculum, and Lessons Learned

This article describes an initiative to train public sector clinicians in competency-based clinical supervision. It was delivered as an 18-session course taught online to clinicians employed in departments of behavioral health in nine Southern California counties. The curriculum was co-constructed b...

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Autores principales: Hutman, Heidi, Enyedy, Karen, Ellis, Michael, Goodyear, Rodney, Falender, Carol, Campos, Alvaro, Bahadur, Mudita, dickey, lore, Duan, Changming, Ferdinand, Lisa, Nolan, Sarah, Tribitt, Tamara, Tsong, Yuying, Wood, LaTonya, Zetzer, Heidi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8025061/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33840833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10879-021-09499-3
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author Hutman, Heidi
Enyedy, Karen
Ellis, Michael
Goodyear, Rodney
Falender, Carol
Campos, Alvaro
Bahadur, Mudita
dickey, lore
Duan, Changming
Ferdinand, Lisa
Nolan, Sarah
Tribitt, Tamara
Tsong, Yuying
Wood, LaTonya
Zetzer, Heidi
author_facet Hutman, Heidi
Enyedy, Karen
Ellis, Michael
Goodyear, Rodney
Falender, Carol
Campos, Alvaro
Bahadur, Mudita
dickey, lore
Duan, Changming
Ferdinand, Lisa
Nolan, Sarah
Tribitt, Tamara
Tsong, Yuying
Wood, LaTonya
Zetzer, Heidi
author_sort Hutman, Heidi
collection PubMed
description This article describes an initiative to train public sector clinicians in competency-based clinical supervision. It was delivered as an 18-session course taught online to clinicians employed in departments of behavioral health in nine Southern California counties. The curriculum was co-constructed by a team of clinical supervision scholars and leaders who then served as instructors. Each two-hour meeting addressed a specific topic for which a training video had been prepared, usually featuring a member of the training team who had expertise in that topic. The second part of each meeting focused on a class member’s supervision case presentation. Those presentations revealed 35 themes; the four most frequently occurring were: developing supervisees’ clinical competencies, addressing countertransference and parallel process, balancing clinical and administrative supervisory roles, and addressing record keeping/paperwork. Participants’ pre-to-post supervisory self-efficacy changes demonstrated a moderate effect size (Cohen’s d = .46) for the training, with the greatest pre- to post-training changes being in the use of technology, multicultural competencies (awareness of oppression, bias, and stereotyping in clinical work and in clinical supervision), and contracting. They reported that the strengths of the course included an inclusive learning environment and opportunities to reflect on and apply new knowledge and skills, though they also reported struggling with the assignments and the course platform software. Lessons learned reflected the use of technology in this online program, the importance of obtaining buy-in from agency decision makers and being prepared to address challenges related to the use of direct observation in supervision, gatekeeping, and enacting the simultaneous roles of administrative and clinical supervisor.
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spelling pubmed-80250612021-04-07 Training Public Sector Clinicians in Competency-Based Clinical Supervision: Methods, Curriculum, and Lessons Learned Hutman, Heidi Enyedy, Karen Ellis, Michael Goodyear, Rodney Falender, Carol Campos, Alvaro Bahadur, Mudita dickey, lore Duan, Changming Ferdinand, Lisa Nolan, Sarah Tribitt, Tamara Tsong, Yuying Wood, LaTonya Zetzer, Heidi J Contemp Psychother Original Paper This article describes an initiative to train public sector clinicians in competency-based clinical supervision. It was delivered as an 18-session course taught online to clinicians employed in departments of behavioral health in nine Southern California counties. The curriculum was co-constructed by a team of clinical supervision scholars and leaders who then served as instructors. Each two-hour meeting addressed a specific topic for which a training video had been prepared, usually featuring a member of the training team who had expertise in that topic. The second part of each meeting focused on a class member’s supervision case presentation. Those presentations revealed 35 themes; the four most frequently occurring were: developing supervisees’ clinical competencies, addressing countertransference and parallel process, balancing clinical and administrative supervisory roles, and addressing record keeping/paperwork. Participants’ pre-to-post supervisory self-efficacy changes demonstrated a moderate effect size (Cohen’s d = .46) for the training, with the greatest pre- to post-training changes being in the use of technology, multicultural competencies (awareness of oppression, bias, and stereotyping in clinical work and in clinical supervision), and contracting. They reported that the strengths of the course included an inclusive learning environment and opportunities to reflect on and apply new knowledge and skills, though they also reported struggling with the assignments and the course platform software. Lessons learned reflected the use of technology in this online program, the importance of obtaining buy-in from agency decision makers and being prepared to address challenges related to the use of direct observation in supervision, gatekeeping, and enacting the simultaneous roles of administrative and clinical supervisor. Springer US 2021-04-07 2021 /pmc/articles/PMC8025061/ /pubmed/33840833 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10879-021-09499-3 Text en © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2021, corrected publication 2021 This article is made available via the PMC Open Access Subset for unrestricted research re-use and secondary analysis in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for the duration of the World Health Organization (WHO) declaration of COVID-19 as a global pandemic.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Hutman, Heidi
Enyedy, Karen
Ellis, Michael
Goodyear, Rodney
Falender, Carol
Campos, Alvaro
Bahadur, Mudita
dickey, lore
Duan, Changming
Ferdinand, Lisa
Nolan, Sarah
Tribitt, Tamara
Tsong, Yuying
Wood, LaTonya
Zetzer, Heidi
Training Public Sector Clinicians in Competency-Based Clinical Supervision: Methods, Curriculum, and Lessons Learned
title Training Public Sector Clinicians in Competency-Based Clinical Supervision: Methods, Curriculum, and Lessons Learned
title_full Training Public Sector Clinicians in Competency-Based Clinical Supervision: Methods, Curriculum, and Lessons Learned
title_fullStr Training Public Sector Clinicians in Competency-Based Clinical Supervision: Methods, Curriculum, and Lessons Learned
title_full_unstemmed Training Public Sector Clinicians in Competency-Based Clinical Supervision: Methods, Curriculum, and Lessons Learned
title_short Training Public Sector Clinicians in Competency-Based Clinical Supervision: Methods, Curriculum, and Lessons Learned
title_sort training public sector clinicians in competency-based clinical supervision: methods, curriculum, and lessons learned
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8025061/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33840833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10879-021-09499-3
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