Clinical significance: a statistical approach to defining
meaningful change in psychotherapy research
N. Jacobson, и P. Truax. Journal of consulting and clinical psychology, 59 (1):
12--19(февраля 1991)PMID: 2002127.
Аннотация
In 1984, Jacobson, Follette, and Revenstorf defined
clinically significant change as the extent to which
therapy moves someone outside the range of the
dysfunctional population or within the range of the
functional population. In the present article, ways of
operationalizing this definition are described, and
examples are used to show how clients can be categorized on
the basis of this definition. A reliable change index
(RC) is also proposed to determine whether the magnitude
of change for a given client is statistically reliable. The
inclusion of the RC leads to a twofold criterion for
clinically significant change.
%0 Journal Article
%1 jacobson.truax:clinical
%A Jacobson, N S
%A Truax, P
%D 1991
%J Journal of consulting and clinical psychology
%K Clinical Design Female, Humans, Male, Marital Marriage, Models, Protocols, Psychotherapy, Research Statistical, Therapy, statistic
%N 1
%P 12--19
%T Clinical significance: a statistical approach to defining
meaningful change in psychotherapy research
%V 59
%X In 1984, Jacobson, Follette, and Revenstorf defined
clinically significant change as the extent to which
therapy moves someone outside the range of the
dysfunctional population or within the range of the
functional population. In the present article, ways of
operationalizing this definition are described, and
examples are used to show how clients can be categorized on
the basis of this definition. A reliable change index
(RC) is also proposed to determine whether the magnitude
of change for a given client is statistically reliable. The
inclusion of the RC leads to a twofold criterion for
clinically significant change.
@article{jacobson.truax:clinical,
abstract = {In 1984, Jacobson, Follette, and Revenstorf defined
clinically significant change as the extent to which
therapy moves someone outside the range of the
dysfunctional population or within the range of the
functional population. In the present article, ways of
operationalizing this definition are described, and
examples are used to show how clients can be categorized on
the basis of this definition. A reliable change index
({RC)} is also proposed to determine whether the magnitude
of change for a given client is statistically reliable. The
inclusion of the {RC} leads to a twofold criterion for
clinically significant change.},
added-at = {2017-03-30T21:37:25.000+0200},
author = {Jacobson, N S and Truax, P},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c82659222a52118977e3fbf5096a4e1b/sveng},
interhash = {5a1f5f92c8d5cc56340c63614e43f6b1},
intrahash = {c82659222a52118977e3fbf5096a4e1b},
issn = {0022-{006X}},
journal = {Journal of consulting and clinical psychology},
keywords = {Clinical Design Female, Humans, Male, Marital Marriage, Models, Protocols, Psychotherapy, Research Statistical, Therapy, statistic},
language = {eng},
month = feb,
note = {{PMID:} 2002127},
number = 1,
pages = {12--19},
shorttitle = {Clinical significance},
timestamp = {2017-04-01T10:44:00.000+0200},
title = {Clinical significance: a statistical approach to defining
meaningful change in psychotherapy research},
volume = 59,
year = 1991
}