1. Increasing the Availability of Psychological Treatments: A Multinational Study of a Scalable Method for Training Therapists
- Author
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Marianne, O'Connor, Katy E, Morgan, Suzanne, Bailey-Straebler, Christopher G, Fairburn, and Zafra, Cooper
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,web-centered ,Original Paper ,Cognitive Behavioral Therapy ,education ,Allied Health Personnel ,eating disorders ,Middle Aged ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Young Adult ,Treatment Outcome ,cognitive therapy ,Humans ,Female ,effective treatment ,internet ,Aged - Abstract
Background One of the major barriers to the dissemination and implementation of psychological treatments is the scarcity of suitably trained therapists. A highly scalable form of Web-centered therapist training, undertaken without external support, has recently been shown to have promise in promoting therapist competence. Objective The aim of this study was to conduct an evaluation of the acceptability and effectiveness of a scalable independent form of Web-centered training in a multinational sample of therapists and investigate the characteristics of those most likely to benefit. Methods A cohort of eligible therapists was recruited internationally and offered access to Web-centered training in enhanced cognitive behavioral therapy, a multicomponent, evidence-based, psychological treatment for any form of eating disorder. No external support was provided during training. Therapist competence was assessed using a validated competence measure before training and after 20 weeks. Results A total of 806 therapists from 33 different countries expressed interest in the study, and 765 (94.9%) completed a pretraining assessment. The median number of training modules completed was 15 out of a possible 18 (interquartile range, IQR: 4-18), and 87.9% (531/604) reported that they treated at least one patient during training as recommended. Median pretraining competence score was 7 (IQR: 5-10, range: 0-19; N=765), and following training, it was 12 (IQR: 9-15, range: 0-20; N=577). The expected change in competence scores from pretraining to posttraining was 3.5 (95% CI 3.1-3.8; P
- Published
- 2018