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Handout 2. Clinical Assessment: How and Why Does the Client Behave Abnormally?. What is assessment?_____________________________________________________ assessment is used to determine how and why a person is behaving abnormally and how that person may be helpedFocus is _____________ on an indi
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1. Chapter 4 Handouts Clinical Assessment, Diagnosis, and Treatment
2. Handout 2 Clinical Assessment: How and Why Does the Client Behave Abnormally? What is assessment?
_______________________________________
______________ assessment is used to determine how and why a person is behaving abnormally and how that person may be helped
Focus is _____________ – on an individual person
Also may be used to evaluate treatment progress
3. Handout 3 Clinical Assessment: How and Why Does the Client Behave Abnormally? The specific tools used in an assessment depend on the clinician’s theoretical orientation
Hundreds of clinical assessment tools have been developed and fall into three categories:
Clinical interviews
Tests
Observations
4. Handout 4 Characteristics of Assessment Tools To be useful, assessment tools must be _________ and have clear _________ and _________
Standardization is the process in which a test is administered to a large group whose performance serves as a common standard (norm) against which individual scores are judged
The “standardization sample” must be representative
One must standardize _____________ , ___________ , and _______________
5. Handout 5 Characteristics of Assessment Tools Reliability is the _______________ of a test
Two main types:
__________________ reliability
A good test will yield the same results in the same situation
To test for this type of reliability, a subject is tested on two different occasions and the scores are correlated – the higher the correlation, the greater the test’s reliability
__________________ reliability
Independent judges agree on how to score and interpret a particular test
6. Handout 6 Characteristics of Assessment Tools Validity is the __________ of a test’s results
A good test must accurately measure what it is supposed to be measuring
Three specific types:
________________ – a test appears to measure what it is supposed to measure; does not necessarily indicate true validity
________________ – a test accurately predicts future characteristics or behavior
________________ – a test’s results agree with independent measures assessing similar characteristics or behavior
7. Handout 7 Clinical Interviews Face-to-face encounters
Often the first contact between a client and a therapist/assessor
Used to collect detailed information, especially personal history, about a client
Allow the interviewer to focus on whatever topics they consider most important
8. Handout 8 Clinical Interviews Conducting the interview
Focus depends on theoretical orientation
Can be either ___________ or ___________
In unstructured interviews, clinicians ask open-ended questions
In structured interviews, clinicians ask prepared questions, often from a published interview schedule
May include a mental status exam
9. Handout 9 Clinical Interviews Limitations:
May lack _________________ or accuracy
Interviewers may be biased or may make mistakes in judgment
Interviews, particularly _______________ ones, may lack reliability
10. Handout 10 Clinical Tests Devices for gathering information about specific topics from which broader information can be inferred
More than 500 different tests are in use
They fall into six categories …
11. Handout 11 Clinical Tests _________________ tests
Require that subjects interpret vague and ambiguous stimuli or follow open-ended instruction
Mainly used by ______________ practitioners
Most popular:
Rorschach inkblots
Thematic Apperception Test
Sentence completion
Drawings
12. Handout 12 Clinical Test: Rorschach Inkblot
13. Handout 13 Clinical Test: Thematic Apperception Test
14. Handout 14 Clinical Test: Sentence-Completion Test “I wish ___________________________”
“My father ________________________”
15. Handout 15 Clinical Test: Drawings Draw-a-Person (DAP) test:
“Draw a person”
“Draw another person of the opposite sex”
16. Handout 16 Clinical Tests Projective tests
Strengths and weaknesses:
Helpful for providing “supplementary” information
Have rarely demonstrated much ________________
May be biased against __________________
17. Handout 17 Clinical Tests ________________ inventories
Designed to measure broad personality characteristics
Focus on behaviors, beliefs, and feelings
Usually based on self-reported responses
Most widely used: Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
18. Handout 18 Clinical Test: MMPIMinnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory Consists of 550 self-statements that can be answered “true,” “false,” or “cannot say”
Statements describe physical concerns; mood; morale; attitudes toward religion, sex, and social activities; and psychological symptoms
Assesses careless responding & lying
19. Handout 19 Clinical Test: MMPIMinnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory Comprised of ten clinical scales:
Hypochondriasis (HS)
Depression (D)
Conversion hysteria (Hy)
Psychopathic deviate (PD)
Masculinity-femininity (Mf)
Scores range from 0 – 120
Above 70 = deviant
Graphed to create a “profile” Paranoia (P)
Psychasthenia (Pt)
Schizophrenia (Sc)
Hypomania (Ma)
Social introversion (Si)
21. Handout 21 Clinical Tests Personality inventories
Strengths and weaknesses:
Easier, cheaper, and faster to administer than projective tests
________________ scored and standardized
Appear to have greater validity than projective tests
Measured traits often cannot be directly examined – how can we really know the assessment is correct?
Tests fail to allow for __________________ in responses
22. Handout 22 Clinical Tests Response inventories
Usually based on self-reported responses
Focus on one specific area of functioning
Affective inventories (example: Beck Depression Inventory)
Social skills inventories
Cognitive inventories
24. Handout 24 Clinical Tests Response inventories
Strengths and weaknesses:
Have strong ____________________
Rarely include questions to assess careless or inaccurate responding
Few (BDI is one exception) have been subjected to careful standardization, reliability, and/or validity procedures
25. Handout 25 Clinical Tests ____________________ tests
Measure physiological response as an indication of psychological problems
Includes heart rate, blood pressure, body temperature, galvanic skin response, and muscle contraction
Most popular is the __________ (lie detector)
26. Handout 26 Clinical Tests Psychophysiological tests
Strengths and weaknesses:
Require expensive equipment that must be tuned and maintained
Can be inaccurate and unreliable (see Box 4-2)
27. Handout 27 Clinical Tests ____________________________ tests
Neurological tests __________ assess brain function by assessing brain structure and activity
Examples: EEG, PET scans, CAT scans, MRI
Neuropsychological tests __________ assess brain function by assessing cognitive, perceptual, and motor functioning
Most widely used is the Bender Visual-Motor Gestalt Test
28. Handout 28 Clinical Test: Bender Visual-Motor Gestalt Test
29. Handout 29 Clinical Tests Neurological and neuropsychological tests
Strengths and weaknesses:
Can be very accurate
Bender-Gestalt can detect general organic impairment in ~75% of cases
At best, though, these tests are rough and general screening devices
Best when used in a battery of tests, each targeting a specific skill area
30. Handout 30 Clinical Tests _______________________ tests
Designed to measure intellectual ability
Comprised of a series of tests assessing both verbal and non-verbal skills
Generate an ______________________ (IQ)
Most popular: Wechsler (WAIS, WISC)
31. Handout 31 Clinical Tests Intelligence tests
Strengths and weaknesses:
Are among the most carefully produced of all clinical tests
Highly standardized on large groups of subjects
Have very high reliability and validity
Because intelligence is an inferred quality, it can only be measured indirectly
32. Handout 32 Clinical Tests Intelligence tests
Strengths and weaknesses:
Performance can be influenced by non-intelligence factors (e.g., ____________ , ____________ , ______________________)
Tests may contain _________ in language or tasks
Members of minority groups may have less experience and be less comfortable with these types of tests, influencing their results
33. Handout 33 Clinical Observations Systematic observation of behavior
Several kinds:
Naturalistic
Analog
Self-monitoring
34. Handout 34 Clinical Observations Naturalistic and analog observations
Naturalistic observations occur in ____________ environments
Can occur in homes, schools, institutions (hospitals and prisons), and community settings
Tend to focus on parent–child, sibling–child, or teacher–child interactions
Observations are generally made by “________________” and reported to a clinician
If naturalistic observation is impractical, analog observations are used and occur in __________________
35. Handout 35 Clinical Observations Naturalistic and analog observations
Strengths and weaknesses:
Reliability is a concern
Different observers may focus on different aspects of behavior
Validity is a concern
Risk of “overload,” “observer drift,” and observer bias
______________________ may also limit validity
Observations may lack _____________________ validity
36. Handout 36 Clinical Observations Self-monitoring
People observe themselves and carefully record the frequency of certain behaviors, feelings, or cognitions as they occur over time
37. Handout 37 Clinical Observations Self-monitoring
Strengths and weaknesses:
Useful in assessing infrequent behaviors
Useful for observing overly frequent behaviors
Provides a means of measuring private thoughts or perceptions
Validity is often a problem
Clients may not receive proper training and instruction
Clients may not record information accurately
When people are observed, they often change their behavior
38. Handout 38 Diagnosis: Does the Client’s Syndrome Match a Known Disorder? Using all available information, clinicians attempt to paint a “_______________”
Influenced by their _________________
Using assessment data and the clinical picture, clinicians attempt to make a ________________
A determination that a person’s problems reflect a particular disorder or syndrome
Based on an existing _________________
39. Handout 39 Classification Systems Lists of categories, disorders, and symptom descriptions, with guidelines for assignment
Focus on clusters of symptoms (syndromes)
In current use in the US: DSM-IV
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th edition)
40. Handout 40 DSM-IV Published in 1994, revised slightly in 2000
Lists approximately 400 disorders
Listed in the inside back flap of your text
Describes criteria for diagnoses, key clinical features, and related features which are often but not always present
People can be diagnosed with multiple disorders…
41. Handout 41 Lifetime Prevalence of DSM Diagnoses
42. Handout 42 The DSM-IV ______________________________
Uses 5 axes (____________________) to develop a full clinical picture
People usually receive a diagnosis on either Axis I or Axis II, but they may receive diagnoses on both
43. Handout 43 The DSM-IV Axis I
Most frequently diagnosed disorders except personality disorders and mental retardation
44. Handout 44 Major Axis I Diagnostic Categories
45. Handout 45 The DSM-IV Axis II
Personality disorders and mental retardation
Long-standing problems
Axis III
Relevant general medical conditions
Axis IV
Psychosocial and environmental problems
46. Handout 46 The DSM-IV Axis V
Global assessment of psychological, social, and occupational functioning
Current functioning and highest functioning in past year
0–100 scale
47. Handout 47 Are Classifications Reliable and Valid? In this case reliability = different diagnosticians agreeing on a diagnosis using the same classification system
DSM-IV has greater reliability than any previous editions
Used field trials to increase reliability
Reliability is still a concern
48. Handout 48 Are Classifications Reliable and Valid? In this case validity = accuracy of information that the diagnostic categories provide
____________ validity is of the most use clinically
DSM-IV has greater validity than any previous editions
Conducted extensive literature reviews and ran field studies
Validity is still a concern
49. Handout 49 Can Diagnosis and Labeling Cause Harm? Misdiagnosis always a concern
Major issue is reliance on __________________
Also present is the issue of _______________
Diagnosis may be a self-fulfilling prophecy
50. Handout 50 Treatment: How Might the Client Be Helped? Treatment decisions
Begin with assessment information and diagnostic decisions to determine a treatment plan
Use a combination of ___________________________
Other factors:
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
General state of clinical knowledge – currently focusing on ___________________________________________
51. Handout 51 The Effectiveness of Treatment Over 400 forms of therapy in practice, but is therapy effective?
Difficult question to answer:
How do you define success?
How do you measure improvement?
How do you compare treatments – treatments differ in range and complexity; therapists differ in skill and knowledge; clients differ in severity and motivation…
52. Handout 52 The Effectiveness of Treatment Controlled clinical research and therapy outcome studies typically assess one of the following questions:
Is therapy in general effective?
Are particular therapies generally effective?
Are particular therapies effective for particular problems?
53. Handout 53 The Effectiveness of Treatment Is therapy generally effective?
Research suggests that therapy is generally more effective than ____________ or than
In one major study using ____________ , the average person who received treatment was better off than 75% of the untreated subjects
54. Handout 54
55. Handout 55 The Effectiveness of Treatment Is therapy generally effective?
A study conducted by Consumer Reports magazine found that “consumers” of therapy found it to be helpful or at least satisfying
Also a question, though, is whether therapy can be harmful?
Has this potential
Studies report ~5% get worse with treatment
56. Handout 56 The Effectiveness of Treatment Are particular therapies generally effective?
Generally, therapy outcome studies lump all therapies together to consider their general effectiveness
One critic has called this the “__________________”
It is argued that scientists must look at the effectiveness of ______________ therapies
There is a movement (“______________”) to look at __________________ among therapies
57. Handout 57 The Effectiveness of Treatment Are particular therapies effective for particular problems?
Studies now being conducted to examine effectiveness of specific treatments for specific disorders:
“ ______ specific treatment, by ______, is the most effective for ______ individual with ______ specific problem, and under ______ set of circumstances?”
Recent studies focus on the effectiveness of combined approaches – ________________ combined with certain forms of _______________ – to treat certain disorders