Módszerek összehasonlítása
Tekintse át a kiválasztott módszereket egymás mellett; az eltérő sorok kiemelve jelennek meg.
| Reliable Change Index× | Clinical Significance Analysis× | |
|---|---|---|
| Tudományterület | Social Work | Social Work |
| Módszercsalád | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Keletkezés éve | 1991 | 1991 |
| Megalkotó | Neil S. Jacobson & Paula Truax | Neil S. Jacobson & Paula Truax |
| Típus≠ | Statistical index of whether an individual client's change exceeds measurement error | Two-part classification of whether individual change is both reliable and meaningful |
| Alapmű | Jacobson, N. S., & Truax, P. (1991). Clinical significance: A statistical approach to defining meaningful change in psychotherapy research. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 59(1), 12–19. DOI ↗ | Jacobson, N. S., & Truax, P. (1991). Clinical significance: A statistical approach to defining meaningful change in psychotherapy research. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 59(1), 12–19. DOI ↗ |
| Alternatív nevek | RCI, Reliable Change Index (Jacobson-Truax), Jacobson-Truax Reliable Change, Reliable Change Criterion | Clinical Significance, Jacobson-Truax Method, Clinically Significant Change, Recovery Classification |
| Kapcsolódó | 4 | 4 |
| Összefoglaló≠ | The Reliable Change Index (RCI) is a statistic that tells whether the change in an individual client's score on a measure, from before to after an intervention, is large enough that it is unlikely to be an artifact of the instrument's measurement error. Introduced by Neil Jacobson and Paula Truax in 1991 as one half of their two-part definition of clinically significant change, it converts a pre-post difference into a standardized value and compares it against a critical cutoff, typically 1.96, so that practitioners and researchers can classify each client as reliably improved, unchanged, or reliably deteriorated. | Clinical significance analysis is a method for deciding whether an individual client's change after treatment is not only statistically reliable but also meaningful in real-world terms — specifically, whether the client has moved out of the dysfunctional range and into the range typical of a functional or non-clinical population. Formalized by Neil Jacobson and Paula Truax in 1991, it combines a reliable-change criterion with a clinical cutoff to sort each client into categories such as recovered, improved, unchanged, or deteriorated, complementing group-level statistics that say nothing about individual benefit. |
| ScholarGateAdatkészlet ↗ |
|
|