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Chapter 6 Assessment: Interviewing and Observation INTRODUCTION TO CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY 2E HUNSLEY & LEE PREPARED BY DR. CATHY CHOVAZ, KING’S COLLEGE, UWO
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Interviewing and Ethics Type of Interviews General Issues in Interviewing Observations Observations: Self-Monitoring Topics
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Confidentiality: A cornerstone of psychotherapy – all information must remain private between the therapist and client Limits on confidentiality: Danger to self Danger to others Harm to children/elders Judge superseding confidentiality (privilege) All Canadian provinces have mandatory child protection laws Interviewing and Ethics
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Unstructured interviews: Clinician interviews the client based on a loose set of goals and questions Open questions: allow and encourage client to answer in elaborate manner Closed questions: Yes or no questions Semi-structured interviews: Specific questions set by clinician (or treatment clinic) that allow some flexibility in how and what the clinician asks Type of Interviews
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Structured diagnostic interviews: Very specific format for asking questions and for determining follow up questions Structured Clinical Interview for Axis I Disorders (SCID): Designed to cover DSM disorders SCID-I: More comprehensive – covers all DSM disorders SCID-CV: Only most common disorders Type of Interviews
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Structured diagnostic interviews (cont.): Anxiety Disorders Interview Schedule (ADIS-IV): Designed to cover in more depth DSM anxiety disorders and common co-morbid disorders Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders (PRIME- MD): Brief measure used in primary care to screen for mental disorders (brevity makes it less reliable) Dominic Interactive – developed by Canadian researchers for children aged 6 – 11 years Type of Interviews
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Attending skills: Important components of active listening Attention to body language: eye contact, leaning forward, head nods, etc. Absence of verbal activity Restating what the client said and checking if that was correct Rephrasing/clarifying Non-direction reflection of feeling Summarizing General Issues in Interviewing
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Focus is on the client: Clinician does not self-disclose or convey things that they are struggling with Respectful and non-judgemental Non-blaming stance Cultural sensitivity Canada is an increasingly multicultural society Knowledge of self and own culture Knowledge of others and differences ‘Cultural humility’ – openness to differences (without pathologizing) General Issues in Interviewing
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Importance of defining the problem: Clients are often vague about presenting problems Clinician must know what is normative behaviour Questions about the frequency, duration, and intensity of the problem Questions about the meaning of the problem e.g., Tell me what you mean by “depressed” General Issues in Interviewing
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Importance of defining the goals for treatment: Clients often do not know what therapy can do Goals must be important to the client Goals must be expressed in terms of the ways people behave Goals must be small, simple, and achievable Goals must be in positive terms (e.g., “how would you know if therapy worked?”) General Issues in Interviewing
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Suicide assessment: Importance of asking direct questions. For example: Specific thoughts about suicide Past attempts Plans for committing suicide (obtaining means) Ever cut yourself intentionally? What are the reasons for committing suicide Friendship or support system in place? General Issues in Interviewing
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Interviewing couples: Importance of flexibility and interpersonal skills of the clinician to deal with two individuals; also importance of structuring and directing the interview Interviewing families: Similar challenges as with couples – but with the difficulty of establishing rapport with many individuals at once General Issues in Interviewing
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Interviewing older adults: Knowledge of life span issues without stereotyping (possible concerns with declining health, loss of autonomy, bereavement, mortality) Interviewing children and adolescents: Using age appropriate behaviour and language; not leading the child to an answer or response; less eye contact is often helpful; knowledge of current media/toys/games General Issues in Interviewing
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Attention to many facets of the client during the interview: (e.g., client activity level, attention span, impulsivity, tone of voice, self-reflectiveness, etc. ) Direct observations: observing the client in different environments if possible (e.g., child with ADHD at school) Observations
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Self-monitoring: Strategy for clients to write down/log information throughout the day on a particular behaviour (e.g., smoking, food intake, headache, interpersonal interaction) Helps decrease memory errors Provides additional information about context Reactivity: How self-monitoring can effect the behaviour being evaluated Observations: Self-Monitoring
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Ecological Momentary Assessment: (a.k.a. experience sampling) gathering data about emotions, thoughts, behaviours or experiences through the use of a PDA, pager, or other device that prompts the user randomly throughout the day Used in both research as well as assessment and treatment Observations: Self-Monitoring
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