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Client Satisfaction Questionnaire×Rapid Assessment Instrument×
CampoSocial WorkSocial Work
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen19792002
Autor originalDaniel Larsen, C. Clifford Attkisson & colleaguesWalter W. Hudson and the clinical-measurement tradition; codified by Springer, Abell & Hudson
TipoBrief standardized measure of client satisfaction with servicesBrief, standardized, self-report measure for repeated use in practice
Fuente seminalLarsen, D. L., Attkisson, C. C., Hargreaves, W. A., & Nguyen, T. D. (1979). Assessment of client/patient satisfaction: Development of a general scale. Evaluation and Program Planning, 2(3), 197–207. DOI ↗Springer, D. W., Abell, N., & Hudson, W. W. (2002). Creating and validating rapid assessment instruments for practice and research: Part 1. Research on Social Work Practice, 12(3), 408–439. DOI ↗
AliasCSQ, CSQ-8, Client Satisfaction Scale, Consumer Satisfaction QuestionnaireRAI, Rapid Assessment Instruments, Brief Standardized Self-Report Scale, Clinical Measurement Package Scales
Relacionados44
ResumenThe Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ) is a brief, standardized self-report measure of how satisfied clients are with the human services they receive, most commonly used in its eight-item form, the CSQ-8. Developed by Daniel Larsen, C. Clifford Attkisson, and colleagues in 1979, it produces a single satisfaction score that programs use as a consumer-perspective indicator of service quality, complementing outcome measures by capturing whether clients found the service helpful, of good quality, and worth recommending.A rapid assessment instrument (RAI) is a short, standardized, self-report measure designed to be completed quickly and repeatedly so that a social worker can assess the magnitude of a client's problem, compare it against a validated clinical cutoff, and monitor change over the course of an intervention. The format was championed by Walter Hudson, whose Clinical Measurement Package scales set the template, and was systematized for practitioners by Springer, Abell, and Hudson, who laid out how to create and validate such instruments for practice and research.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Client Satisfaction Questionnaire · Rapid Assessment Instrument. Recuperado el 2026-06-24 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare