Publication | Open Access
Understanding Barriers to Evidence-Based Assessment: Clinician Attitudes Toward Standardized Assessment Tools
219
Citations
40
References
2010
Year
Family MedicineNational Multidisciplinary SurveyEducationEvidence-based AssessmentProgram EvaluationPrimary CareAttitude ScalesClinical PsychologyClinical EvaluationAssessmentEvidence-based TherapyReliabilityHealth PolicyPsychiatryEvidence-based RecommendationOutcome AssessmentPatient SafetyPediatricsClinical PracticeEducational AssessmentMedicineEvidence-based PracticeSurvey Methodology
In an era of evidence-based practice, why are clinicians not typically engaged in evidence-based assessment? To begin to understand this issue, a national multidisciplinary survey was conducted to examine clinician attitudes toward standardized assessment tools. There were 1,442 child clinicians who provided opinions about the psychometric qualities of these tools, their benefit over clinical judgment alone, and their practicality. Doctoral-level clinicians and psychologists expressed more positive ratings in all three domains than master's-level clinicians and nonpsychologists, respectively, although only the disciplinary differences remained significant when predictors were examined simultaneously. All three attitude scales were predictive of standardized assessment tool use, although practical concerns were the strongest and only independent predictor of use.
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