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Structured Decision Making×Evidence-Based Practice Process×
TudományterületSocial WorkSocial Work
MódszercsaládProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Keletkezés éve19991996
MegalkotóChildren's Research Center (now Evident Change); Christopher Baird, Dennis Wagner & colleaguesEvidence-based medicine tradition (Sackett et al.); translated to social work by Gambrill and others
TípusStructured assessment system standardizing key decisions across the child-welfare case processStructured process for integrating evidence, expertise, and client values in practice decisions
AlapműBaird, C., Wagner, D., Healy, T., & Johnson, K. (1999). Risk assessment in child protective services: Consensus and actuarial model reliability. Child Welfare, 78(6), 723–748. link ↗Sackett, D. L., Rosenberg, W. M. C., Gray, J. A. M., Haynes, R. B., & Richardson, W. S. (1996). Evidence based medicine: What it is and what it isn't. BMJ, 312(7023), 71–72. DOI ↗
Alternatív nevekSDM, Structured Decision Making (Child Welfare), SDM System, Structured Decision-Making ModelEBP Process, Evidence-Based Practice (Process Model), Five-Step EBP Process, Evidence-Informed Practice Process
Kapcsolódó44
ÖsszefoglalóStructured Decision Making (SDM) is a child-welfare case-management system that brings consistency to the most consequential decisions in a case — whether to investigate, whether a child is safe, how high the risk of future maltreatment is, what the family needs, and whether to close — by applying a standardized, research-based assessment tool at each of these decision points. Developed by the Children's Research Center (now Evident Change) around the actuarial-risk work of Christopher Baird, Dennis Wagner, and colleagues, SDM aims to reduce the wide variability and bias of unaided judgment and to target resources where they matter most.The evidence-based practice (EBP) process is a structured, five-step way of making practice decisions by integrating the best available research evidence with professional expertise and the client's values and circumstances. Originating in evidence-based medicine as defined by Sackett and colleagues and translated into social work by Eileen Gambrill and others, it reframes EBP not as a fixed list of approved programs but as a transparent decision process — ask, acquire, appraise, apply, assess — that an individual practitioner carries out with and for a particular client.
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ScholarGateMódszerek összehasonlítása: Structured Decision Making · Evidence-Based Practice Process. Letöltve 2026-06-24, forrás: https://scholargate.app/hu/compare