Goal measures for psychotherapy: A systematic review of self‐report, idiographic instruments.

Lloyd, Christopher, Charlie Duncan and Mick Cooper 2019. Goal measures for psychotherapy: A systematic review of self‐report, idiographic instruments. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice. 26 (3). https://doi.org/10.1111/cpsp.12281

TitleGoal measures for psychotherapy: A systematic review of self‐report, idiographic instruments.
TypeJournal article
AuthorsLloyd, Christopher, Charlie Duncan and Mick Cooper
Abstract

Routine outcome monitoring can support client progress in psychotherapy and provide evidence on population‐level outcomes. However, measures have been almost exclusively nomothetic. Idiographic tools provide a complementary approach, combining individually set outcomes with standardized progress ratings. Evidence suggests that goal‐focused idiographic measures may particularly facilitate client progress, and this systematic review aimed to identify and critically evaluate such measures, as used in psychotherapy. In total, 104 texts were eligible for inclusion in the review, with nine measures identified. These took the form of multidimensional tools, brief rating forms, and goal attainment scaling. Psychometric and clinical evidence suggests that these measures may be appropriate tools for supporting client progress, but there is insufficient evidence to validate their use for population‐level evaluation.

JournalClinical Psychology: Science and Practice
Journal citation26 (3)
ISSN0969-5893
1468-2850
Year2019
PublisherWiley
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1111/cpsp.12281
Web address (URL)https://doi.org/10.1111/cpsp.12281
Publication dates
Published12 Sep 2019

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