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Enhancing Treatment Fidelity in Health Behavior Change Studies: Best Practices and Recommendations From the NIH Behavior Change Consortium.
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2004
Year
PsychotherapyCounselingFamily MedicineMental HealthIntervention ScienceTreatment FidelityBehavior ModificationPublic HealthTreatment Fidelity ConceptsHealth Services ResearchPsychiatryHealth PolicyHealth PromotionTreatment Fidelity RefersOutcomes ResearchBehavior TherapyBest PracticesCognitive Behavioral InterventionBehavioral SupportBehavioral MedicineHealth BehaviorTreatment GoalBehavior ChangeMedicine
Treatment fidelity refers to the methodological strategies used to monitor and enhance the reliability and validity of behavioral interventions. This article describes a multisite effort by the Treatment Fidelity Workgroup of the NIH Behavior Change Consortium to identify treatment fidelity concepts and strategies in health behavior intervention research. The work group reviewed treatment fidelity practices in the literature, identified techniques used within the BCC, and developed recommendations covering study design, provider training, treatment delivery, receipt, and enactment of treatment skills. Funding agencies, reviewers, and journal editors are encouraged to make treatment fidelity a standard part of the conduct and evaluation of health behavior intervention research.
Treatment fidelity refers to the methodological strategies used to monitor and enhance the reliability and validity of behavioral interventions. This article describes a multisite effort by the Treatment Fidelity Workgroup of the National Institutes of Health Behavior Change Consortium (BCC) to identify treatment fidelity concepts and strategies in health behavior intervention research. The work group reviewed treatment fidelity practices in the research literature, identified techniques used within the BCC, and developed recommendations for incorporating these practices more consistently. The recommendations cover study design, provider training, treatment delivery, treatment receipt, and enactment of treatment skills. Funding agencies, reviewers, and journal editors are encouraged to make treatment fidelity a standard part of the conduct and evaluation of health behavior intervention research.
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