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The development of a measure of confidence in delivering therapy to people with intellectual disabilities

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The development of a measure of confidence in delivering therapy to people with intellectual disabilities. / Dagnan, Dave; Masson, John; Cavagin, Amy et al.
In: Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Vol. 22, No. 5, 09.2015, p. 392-398.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Dagnan, D, Masson, J, Cavagin, A, Thwaites, R & Hatton, C 2015, 'The development of a measure of confidence in delivering therapy to people with intellectual disabilities', Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, vol. 22, no. 5, pp. 392-398. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.1898

APA

Dagnan, D., Masson, J., Cavagin, A., Thwaites, R., & Hatton, C. (2015). The development of a measure of confidence in delivering therapy to people with intellectual disabilities. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 22(5), 392-398. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.1898

Vancouver

Dagnan D, Masson J, Cavagin A, Thwaites R, Hatton C. The development of a measure of confidence in delivering therapy to people with intellectual disabilities. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy. 2015 Sept;22(5):392-398. Epub 2014 May 6. doi: 10.1002/cpp.1898

Author

Dagnan, Dave ; Masson, John ; Cavagin, Amy et al. / The development of a measure of confidence in delivering therapy to people with intellectual disabilities. In: Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy. 2015 ; Vol. 22, No. 5. pp. 392-398.

Bibtex

@article{cd9dbd82a5c448559eed7146f138fd86,
title = "The development of a measure of confidence in delivering therapy to people with intellectual disabilities",
abstract = "Current policy in UK health services emphasizes that, where possible, people with intellectual disabilities should access the same services as people without intellectual disabilities. One of the barriers to this is the confidence of clinicians and therapists. In this paper, we report on the development of a scale to describe the confidence of therapists in working with people with intellectual disabilities (the Therapy Confidence Scale-Intellectual Disabilities [TCS-ID]). One-hundred and eighty-one therapists who provided talking therapies but who did not work primarily with people with intellectual disabilities completed the scale; 43 people completed the scale twice for test-retest reliability purposes. One-hundred and seven people also completed a scale of general therapy self-efficacy. The TCS-ID has a single factor structure accounting for 62% of the variance, Cronbach's alpha for the scale is 0.93 and test-retest reliability is 0.83. There are significant differences in confidence based upon participants experience in working with people with intellectual disabilities and their therapeutic orientation, and there is a significant association between the TCS-ID and the General Therapy Self-efficacy Scale. Sixty clinicians working in mainstream mental health services received training on adapting their therapeutic approaches to meet the needs of people with intellectual disabilities. The TCS-ID was used pre-training and post-training and demonstrated a significant increase in confidence for all group. We suggest that the scale has good psychometric properties and can be used to develop an understanding of the impact of training for mainstream therapist in working with people with intellectual disabilities. Copyright {\textcopyright} 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Key Practitioner Message There is increasing emphasis on people with intellectual disabilities receiving services from mainstream mental health services. There is no research describing the experiences and outcomes of people with intellectual disabilities receiving mainstream talking therapy services. The confidence that clinicians have in working with people with intellectual disabilities may be a barrier to them receiving mainstream services. The Therapy Confidence Scale-Intellectual Disabilities is a psychometrically sound scale for measuring the confidence of therapists in working with people with intellectual disabilities and is a useful outcome measure for training clinicians to work with people with intellectual disabilities.",
keywords = "Therapist Confidence, Intellectual Disabilities, Training",
author = "Dave Dagnan and John Masson and Amy Cavagin and Richard Thwaites and Chris Hatton",
year = "2015",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1002/cpp.1898",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "392--398",
journal = "Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy",
issn = "1063-3995",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The development of a measure of confidence in delivering therapy to people with intellectual disabilities

AU - Dagnan, Dave

AU - Masson, John

AU - Cavagin, Amy

AU - Thwaites, Richard

AU - Hatton, Chris

PY - 2015/9

Y1 - 2015/9

N2 - Current policy in UK health services emphasizes that, where possible, people with intellectual disabilities should access the same services as people without intellectual disabilities. One of the barriers to this is the confidence of clinicians and therapists. In this paper, we report on the development of a scale to describe the confidence of therapists in working with people with intellectual disabilities (the Therapy Confidence Scale-Intellectual Disabilities [TCS-ID]). One-hundred and eighty-one therapists who provided talking therapies but who did not work primarily with people with intellectual disabilities completed the scale; 43 people completed the scale twice for test-retest reliability purposes. One-hundred and seven people also completed a scale of general therapy self-efficacy. The TCS-ID has a single factor structure accounting for 62% of the variance, Cronbach's alpha for the scale is 0.93 and test-retest reliability is 0.83. There are significant differences in confidence based upon participants experience in working with people with intellectual disabilities and their therapeutic orientation, and there is a significant association between the TCS-ID and the General Therapy Self-efficacy Scale. Sixty clinicians working in mainstream mental health services received training on adapting their therapeutic approaches to meet the needs of people with intellectual disabilities. The TCS-ID was used pre-training and post-training and demonstrated a significant increase in confidence for all group. We suggest that the scale has good psychometric properties and can be used to develop an understanding of the impact of training for mainstream therapist in working with people with intellectual disabilities. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Key Practitioner Message There is increasing emphasis on people with intellectual disabilities receiving services from mainstream mental health services. There is no research describing the experiences and outcomes of people with intellectual disabilities receiving mainstream talking therapy services. The confidence that clinicians have in working with people with intellectual disabilities may be a barrier to them receiving mainstream services. The Therapy Confidence Scale-Intellectual Disabilities is a psychometrically sound scale for measuring the confidence of therapists in working with people with intellectual disabilities and is a useful outcome measure for training clinicians to work with people with intellectual disabilities.

AB - Current policy in UK health services emphasizes that, where possible, people with intellectual disabilities should access the same services as people without intellectual disabilities. One of the barriers to this is the confidence of clinicians and therapists. In this paper, we report on the development of a scale to describe the confidence of therapists in working with people with intellectual disabilities (the Therapy Confidence Scale-Intellectual Disabilities [TCS-ID]). One-hundred and eighty-one therapists who provided talking therapies but who did not work primarily with people with intellectual disabilities completed the scale; 43 people completed the scale twice for test-retest reliability purposes. One-hundred and seven people also completed a scale of general therapy self-efficacy. The TCS-ID has a single factor structure accounting for 62% of the variance, Cronbach's alpha for the scale is 0.93 and test-retest reliability is 0.83. There are significant differences in confidence based upon participants experience in working with people with intellectual disabilities and their therapeutic orientation, and there is a significant association between the TCS-ID and the General Therapy Self-efficacy Scale. Sixty clinicians working in mainstream mental health services received training on adapting their therapeutic approaches to meet the needs of people with intellectual disabilities. The TCS-ID was used pre-training and post-training and demonstrated a significant increase in confidence for all group. We suggest that the scale has good psychometric properties and can be used to develop an understanding of the impact of training for mainstream therapist in working with people with intellectual disabilities. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Key Practitioner Message There is increasing emphasis on people with intellectual disabilities receiving services from mainstream mental health services. There is no research describing the experiences and outcomes of people with intellectual disabilities receiving mainstream talking therapy services. The confidence that clinicians have in working with people with intellectual disabilities may be a barrier to them receiving mainstream services. The Therapy Confidence Scale-Intellectual Disabilities is a psychometrically sound scale for measuring the confidence of therapists in working with people with intellectual disabilities and is a useful outcome measure for training clinicians to work with people with intellectual disabilities.

KW - Therapist Confidence

KW - Intellectual Disabilities

KW - Training

U2 - 10.1002/cpp.1898

DO - 10.1002/cpp.1898

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 24802005

VL - 22

SP - 392

EP - 398

JO - Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy

JF - Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy

SN - 1063-3995

IS - 5

ER -