J Couns Psychol. 2023 Jul;70(4):448. doi: 10.1037/cou0000678.
Reports the retraction of "Do therapists improve in their ability to assess clients' satisfaction? A truth and bias model" by Brian TaeHyuk Keum, Katherine Morales Dixon, Dennis M. Kivlighan Jr., Clara E. Hill and Charles J. Gelso (, 2021[Oct], Vol 68[5], 608-620). The following article (https://doi.org/10.1037/cou0000525) is being retracted. This retraction is at the request of coauthors Kivlighan, Hill, and Gelso after the results of an investigation by the University of Maryland Institutional Review Board (IRB). The IRB found that the study included data from between one and four therapy clients of the Maryland Psychotherapy Clinic and Research Laboratory (MPCRL) who either had not been asked to provide consent or had withdrawn consent for their data to be included in the research. Keum and Dixon were not responsible for obtaining and verifying participant consent but agreed to the retraction of this article. (The following abstract of the original article appeared in record 2020-51285-001.) We used the truth and bias model to examine changes in tracking accuracy and under/overestimation (directional bias) on therapists' judgments about clients' satisfaction. We examined 3 factors of clinical experience that could moderate accuracy: (a) overall level of acquaintanceship with a client, operationalized as treatment length (i.e., less or more time seeing a client), (b) time point in therapy with a specific client, operationalized as session number (i.e., earlier or later in treatment with a client), and (c) order (1st client seen, 2nd client seen . . . last client seen across two years of training in a psychology clinic) in which clients were seen. We conducted a three-level hierarchical linear modeling using data on 6054 sessions, nested in 284 adult clients, nested in 41 doctoral student therapists providing open-ended psychodynamic individual psychotherapy. We found that therapists were able to accurately track client-rated session evaluations with less underestimation (i.e., lower tendency to estimate that clients were less satisfied than they actually were) as they gained experience (both treatment length and client order). Furthermore, therapists exhibited greater tracking accuracy gains over the span of shorter treatments and when working with clients earlier in their clinical training. In longer treatments and with clients seen later in training, tracking accuracy was stable and consistent. Implications for research and practice are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
报告撤回 Brian TaeHyuk Keum、Katherine Morales Dixon、Dennis M. Kivlighan Jr.、Clara E. Hill 和 Charles J. Gelso 的“治疗师是否能够提高评估客户满意度的能力?真相和偏差模型”(2021 年 10 月,第 68 卷[5],第 608-620 页)。以下文章(https://doi.org/10.1037/cou0000525)正在撤回。这一撤回是应马里兰大学机构审查委员会(IRB)调查后,共同作者 Kivlighan、Hill 和 Gelso 的要求进行的。IRB 发现,该研究包括马里兰州心理治疗诊所和研究实验室(MPCRL)的一至四名治疗客户的数据,这些客户要么没有被要求提供同意,要么已经撤回同意将其数据纳入研究。Keum 和 Dixon 没有负责获取和核实参与者的同意,但同意撤回这篇文章。(原始文章的摘要如下)我们使用真相和偏差模型来检查治疗师对客户满意度判断的跟踪准确性和低估/高估(方向偏差)的变化。我们研究了 3 个可能影响准确性的临床经验因素:(a)与客户的整体熟悉程度,用治疗时间(即,见客户的时间较少或较多)来操作,(b)与特定客户的治疗时间点,用会话数(即,与客户治疗的较早或较晚)来操作,以及(c)在两年的心理学诊所培训中,客户被看到的顺序(第一位客户看到,第二位客户看到... 最后一位客户看到)。我们使用嵌套在 284 名成年客户中的 6054 个会话的数据,进行了三级分层线性建模,嵌套在 41 名博士生治疗师中,他们提供开放式精神动力个体心理治疗。我们发现,随着经验的增加(治疗时间和客户顺序),治疗师能够更准确地跟踪客户对治疗效果的评估,减少低估(即,估计客户的满意度低于实际情况的倾向较低)。此外,治疗师在较短的治疗过程中以及在客户临床培训早期表现出更大的跟踪准确性提高。在较长的治疗过程中和治疗后期的客户中,跟踪准确性是稳定和一致的。讨论了对研究和实践的影响。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2023 APA,保留所有权利)。