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| Target Complaint Scaling× | Self-Anchored Rating Scale× | |
|---|---|---|
| Fagområde | Social Work | Social Work |
| Familie | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Oprindelsesår≠ | 1966 | 2009 |
| Ophavsperson≠ | Carolyn C. Battle, Jerome D. Frank & colleagues (Johns Hopkins) | Codified in social-work practice evaluation by Bloom, Fischer & Orme |
| Type≠ | Individualized outcome measure based on client-elicited presenting complaints | Individualized self-report rating scale with client-defined anchors |
| Oprindelig kilde≠ | Battle, C. C., Imber, S. D., Hoehn-Saric, R., Stone, A. R., Nash, E. R., & Frank, J. D. (1966). Target complaints as criteria of improvement. American Journal of Psychotherapy, 20(1), 184–192. DOI ↗ | Bloom, M., Fischer, J., & Orme, J. G. (2009). Evaluating Practice: Guidelines for the Accountable Professional (6th ed.). Pearson/Allyn & Bacon. ISBN: 9780205458066 |
| Aliasser | Target Complaints, Target Complaint Method, Battle Target Complaints, Target Problem Scaling | SARS, Self-Anchored Scale, Individualized Rating Scale, Client-Anchored Scale |
| Relaterede | 4 | 4 |
| Resumé≠ | Target complaint scaling is an individualized outcome measure in which the client names the specific complaints that brought them to treatment, each complaint is rated for severity at the outset and again at follow-up, and the change in those ratings indexes improvement. Introduced by Carolyn Battle, Jerome Frank, and colleagues at Johns Hopkins in 1966, it grounds outcome measurement in the client's own presenting problems rather than a fixed questionnaire, making it an early and influential model for person-centered, idiographic outcome assessment in psychotherapy and social work. | A self-anchored rating scale (SARS) is an individualized measurement tool in which a client rates a personally relevant target — a feeling, thought, or behavior that may not be captured by any standardized instrument — on a fixed numeric scale whose points the client and worker have anchored in advance with concrete, individually meaningful descriptions. Widely taught in social-work practice evaluation through Bloom, Fischer, and Orme's work, it lets a worker measure highly idiosyncratic internal states repeatedly and reliably, supplying the data for single-system designs when no off-the-shelf scale fits. |
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