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Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
LESSON
15
THE
CONCEPT OF PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT IN
CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
DEFINITION
OF PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
Psychological
assessment can be defined as
"the process of systematically
gathering information about
a
person
in relation to his or her environment so
that decisions can be made,
based on this
information
that
is in the best interests of the
individual".
For
a clinical psychologist a number of questions
are important to consider like
what are patient's
current
problems and the possible resources he
has for dealing with
these problems? What
information
about
his past might be
contributing to the problem? Are there
any people in patients' life
who might be
able
to solve these problems? And
what is his behavior likely
to be in future? Clinical psychologist
is
uniquely
equipped, however, to examine
these issues systematically
through procedures that have
been
carefully
developed and evaluated by their
field.
STEPS
IN THE ASSESSMENT
PROCESS
First
a psychologist formulates an initial
question or set of questions. These
questions are typically
developed
in response to a referral or request
for help made by either an
individual or by others on
behalf
of an individual. (e.g., concerned family
members, parent, and physician).
Second,
a psychologist generates a set of goals
for collection information----what the
psychologist
hopes
to accomplish during the assessment
process.
The
third step in the assessment
process involves the identification of
standards for interpreting
the
information
that is collected.
Fourth,
a psychologist must collect the
relevant data. This step
includes collecting information
about the
person
and the environment and carefully
describing and recording what is
observed.
The
fifth step in the assessment
process involves making decisions and
judgment on the basis of the
data
that
have been collected. Finally, a
psychologist must communicate these
judgments and decisions to
others
typically in the form of a psychological
report.
Psychological
theory and research are
the two primary factors that
shape the clinical assessment
process
and
make it more systematic than the
way people form impressions
of others in everyday life.
Theories
guide
psychologists in forming certain types of questions
and hypothesis and in looking for certain
types
of
information
THE
PROCESS OF PYSCHOLOGICAL
ASSESSMENT
STEP
1: DECIDING WHAT IS BEING
ASSESSED
The
assessment process begins with a
series of questions. Is there a significant
psychological problem?
What
is the nature of this person's problem? Is the
problem primarily one of the emotion,
thought, or
behavior?
What are possible causes of the
problem? What is the course of the
problem likely to be if it
goes
untreated? What type of treatment is
likely to be the most helpful?
These questions come in
part
from
the client and are called the
"referral
questions"------questions that
led the client to refer to
the
psychologist.
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THE
REFERAL
The
assessment process begins with a
referral. Someone--a patient, a teacher,
a psychiatrist, a judge, or
perhaps
a psychologist--poses a question about
the patient. "Why
is Johnny disobedient?" or "Why
can't
Alice learn to read like
other children?" clinicians
thus begin with the
referral
question. It is
important
that they take pains to understand
precisely what the question is or
what the referral source
is
seeking.
In some instances, the question
may be impossible to answer; in others,
the clinician may
decide
that a direct answer is
inappropriate or the question needs
rephrasing.
Often
Client's presenting concerns are
tied to a recent event. The
recent event, however, may
represent
the
final step in a more long-standing
problem. The questions and
concerns that a client poses
at the
time
of referral do not necessarily tell the
whole story. A client is
unlikely to be aware of all
the
information
that may be relevant to a
psychologist in formulating and
understanding of the problem.
Furthermore,
the client may purposefully or
unknowingly withhold information
from the psychologist
for
a variety of reasons. It is important to
recognize that clinical psychologist
cannot simply use
intuition
and subjective judgment to identify the
complex factors that lead to a
referral or to a request
for
help.
Rather, a clinical psychologist
will need to turn the theory
and research in formulating a more
complete
set of initial questions to guide a
formal assessment.
What
does a psychologist want to
know about a person who is
seeking help? Most current theories
of
human
behavior recognize multiple levels of
functioning that are
relevant to understanding
any
behavior.
For example, all emotions
are associated with
underlying biological processes,
they exist
within
the conscious
(but
private) awareness of the individual, and
they are linked to some
type of observable antecedent
and/or
consequent event, either
externally in the environment or
internally within the experience of
the
individual.
Further many theories consider these
processes to be interdependent and
reciprocally related.
The
implication of these complex
relationships for psychological
assessment is clear---a
psychologist
may
assess the client and his or
her problem at a number of different
levels. The primary aspects
of the
person
that are possible targets
for assessment are
biological processes, cognitions,
emotions and
behavior.
Biological
and Psycho-physiological
processes
include heart rate reactivity, blood
pressure galvanic
skin
response, muscle tension, sexual arousal,
startle response, and eye tracking
movement.
Cognitive
processes
include intellectual functioning,
perceptions of the self, perceptions of others,
beliefs
about the causes of events,
and perception of contingency and
control.
Emotional
processes
that are the focus of assessment
include mood states, trait
levels of emotions, and
emotional
reactivity, finally, measure of
overt
behavior include
performance on standardized tasks,
observations
of behavior in simulated situations, and
behavior observed in the client's
natural
environment.
In
addition to these various
aspects environment is also
multifaceted, confronting psychologists
with a
choice
among several levels of focus. These
levels of focus include distinctions,
intermediate, and distal
environment
as well as objective versus
subjective or perceived features of the
environment.
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The
Proximal
and,
or Immediate
features
of the environment include the client's
family environment
and
the characteristics of the school or work
setting.
Intermediate
levels
of the environment include the geographic
region in which the individual
resides.
Finally,
the Distal,
or Broader,
environment includes the general
geographic and socio-cultural
environment
in which the client
lives.
Despite
the potential importance of the different
aspects of the individual and the
environment,
psychologists
cannot assess all these factors
for any single case.
Both the time and the cost
involved in
conducting
such as extensive assessment
would be prohibitive. A psychologist's
theoretical orientation
plays
a critical role in guiding the
psychologist to obtain certain types of
information and to disregard
other
aspects of the person or the
environment.
STEP
2: DETERMINING THE GOALS OF
ASSESMENT
The
second step in the process of
clinical assessment is the formulation of
the psychologist's goal in a
particular
case. Once again, psychologists
are confronted with a number of
choices as they carry out
the
assessment
process. Goals may include
diagnostic classification, determination
of the severity of a
problem,
risk screening for future
problems and evaluation of the effects of treatment, and
prediction
about
the likelihood of certain types of future
behavior.
DIAGNOSIS
Diagnosis
is perhaps a most familiar
term than assessment in the
work of clinical psychologists.
Although
generating a diagnosis is one of the tasks in
which a psychologist may
engage, it is actually a
subset
of the broader process of assessment.
Within the process of psychological
assessment, the task of
diagnosing
implies that certain
procedures or tests are
administered to an individual in order to
classify
the
person problem and, if possible, to
identify causes and prescribe treatment,
psychologists typically
make
diagnosis based on the DSM-IV
criteria.
Diagnostic
decisions are often the first
goal of the assessment process.
Optimally, diagnosis should
provide
information about the specific features,
or symptoms that the person
shares with other
individuals
who have been identified as
having the same pattern of
symptoms. If the criteria for
making
particular
diagnosis are clear and have been
carefully evaluated in this
case, the psychologist will
be
able
to draw on research and information
about these other
individuals.
There
is a close link between assessment
procedures and the diagnostic
system that a psychologists
uses
for
u understanding and classifying
psychotherapy. Specifically, assessment
involves the identification
of
the features or characteristics that
distinguish individual cases
from one another, whereas a
diagnostic
system
involves the grouping together of
individual cases according to
their identifying features. Any
diagnostic
system .such as DSM
IV should
specify a method of assessment to measure
and quantify the
important
symptoms of the various categories or
disorders within the diagnostic system. A
diagnostic
system
represents one of the outcomes of
assessment ---the classification of
individuals using the
information
that has been
generated.
SEVERITY
It
is not always sufficient to
know that an individual
meets the criteria for a
particular problem or
disorder,
because there can be substantial
differences among individuals with a
similar problem, a
concept
referred t o as heterogeneity.
Or
it may also be compared with
the term severity or variability
in
the
disease. For example breast
cancer may vary from a
small-localized tumor (stage 1) to
carcinoma
that
has spread throughout other
parts and systems of the body
(stage IV).
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Discrimination
of the severity of problems or disorders requires
assessment and methods that
are
sensitive
to variation in the f frequency,
intensity, and duration of specific
symptoms. If a patient
meets
the
criteria for major
depression, the psychologist must gather
additional information about the
problem.
An
important factor in determining the
severity of a disorder is t he degree of
impairment that is
present
in
the person's daily life. For
example a patient with an
eating disorder may have
suffered from Bulimia
Nervosa
foe several years, yet is
still able to be successful in her
college courses, work at a
part-time
job,
and maintain her friendship. Another
patient with bulimia,
however, may find that
her
preoccupation
with eating and her concerns
about being overweight have
become the predominant
feature
in her life. Thus psychologist must
consider the individual`s overall life
functioning and
competence
in order to have a complete understanding of the
scopes of the problem.
SCREENING
Not
all psychological assessment
takes place with individuals
who have been referred for
clinical
services.
Often clinical psychologists are
called on to screen large groups of
individuals, either to
identify
the presence of problems or to predict
who is at greatest risk to
develop a problem at some
point
in
the future. For example, several
interesting examples of screening related to
depression have been
developed.
Depression is highly prevalent in the
general population, but only
a small portion of
depressed
individuals seek treatment for the
disorder. Efforts to screen
for depression have
been
undertaken
on a large scale.
In
depression screening individuals are
encouraged to complete a brief depression
questionnaire that
assesses
their current level of
depressive symptoms. Those
who score above a certain
cutoff level that
we
associated with increased
risk for depression are
then contacted for a
diagnostic interview to
determine
if they are suffering from
Major Depression.
Children
whose parents suffer from
Major Depression Disorders are much more
likely to develop
serious
psychological and behavioral problems
than are children whose
parents do not exhibit
an
identifiable
form of psychopathology. Psychologists
may be called on to screen or
identify early
evidence
of problems among children in these
families in order to facilitate
early interventions that
may
prevent
the development of such problems.
Depression
in adolescence is also a prevalent
problem that typically goes
unrecognized, specifically
depression
in adolescent has been found
to be associated with somatic problems
like recurrent
headaches.
Depression screening tools can also
utilized in medical emergency rooms.
Brief depression
questioners
are administered to emergency room
patients to identify those who
may need treatment
for
depression.
PREDICTIONS
In
addition to generating detailed
description of an individual's current
functioning, psychologists are
often
called on to make predictions
about how a person may
behave at some point in the future.
These
predictions
may span very short periods of
time to long-term predictions
about subsequent risk
for
disorders.
One
of the greatest challenges for psychologists is the
prediction of violent behavior
especially in
relation
to the prediction of youth violence.
The accurate prediction of
violent behavior could then
lead
to
attempts to prevent violent
acts before they occur.
Despite the extraordinary significance
of
predicting
violent behavior, psychologists have been
largely unsuccessful in this
effort. This lack of
success
is due, in part, to the fact that we do
not sufficiently understand the complex
factors that leads to
acts
of violence.
Psychologists
are actually effective in
making predictions about
certain problems, particularly if
those
problems
have reasonably high rate of occurrence in
the population. For example
patterns of aggressive
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and
disruptive behavior disorders in
adolescence can be predicted
with some degree of accuracy
from
information
collected in early childhood. In the
prediction of violence and other
low base rate
behaviors,
psychologists
must carefully weigh the
consequences of false positive and false
negative predictions. if
the
consequences of wrongly predicting an
outcome (a false positive) are small and
the costs of missing
an
outcome that does occur(false negative)
are great, then it will be
acceptable to over-predict.
However,
if there are negative consequences to
wrongly predicting an outcome, then even
one instance
of
over prediction will be
problematic.
EVALUATION
OF INTERVENTION
Assessment
is often thought of as an initial
step in formulating a sense of a
client's problem or a
diagnosis
and in developing a plan for
treatment. However, effective assessment
does not end once
treatment
begins. Rather, assessment methods
should be re-administered at regular
intervals to monitor
and
evaluate the effects of treatment.
For
example, by obtaining pretreatment or baseline
information on the nature and severity of a
client's
problems,
follow-up assessment with
the same instrument can be
conducted to allow for evaluation
of
changes
that have resulted from treatment (this
is called the ABA method).
Evaluating
change requires a few essential
steps. Obviously, the same instruments
must be used at both
the
pretreatment and follow-up assessments
that exact comparisons can be
made on these scales.
Further
its is essential that the
measures can be counted on to produce
consistent or reliable
information,
that
is, the measures must be minimally
affected by error so that
meaningful changes cab
be
distinguished
from random
fluctuations.
Finally,
criteria (cut off points)
must be developed to distinguish
clinically meaningful change
from
reliable
but relatively trivial
shifts in the target problems.
STEP
3: SELECTING STANDARDS FOR MAKING
DECISIONS
Knowing
what to measure is only part
of the process of assessment. A
psychologist must also
know
what
to do with the information once it is
collected. Making decisions about the
information is essential,
and
decisions and judgments require points of reference
for comparison.
Standards
are used to determine if a
problem exists, how severe a
problem is, and whether the
individual
has
evidenced improvement over a
specified period of
time.
Comparisons
can be made to standards
that involve other people
(normative standards) or to the self
at
other
points in time (self-referent
standards)
Psychological
assessment reflects the meeting point of
two important functions of
psychology--interest
in
the nature of people in general (the
normative, or nomothetic tradition) and
concerns about a
specific
person
(the individual, idiographic
tradition).
When
working with an individual, a
psychologist is drawing on the
idiographic traditions. This
process
involves
the discovery of what is unique
about this person given
his or her history, current
personality
structure,
and present environment
conditions.
In
arriving at an impression of this
individual, however, the psychologist is
frequently required to
make
judgments
about this person in comparison to
most other people. In doing
so, the psychologist draws
on
the
nomothetic tradition of laws and rules
that apply to the behavior of
people in general.
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The
application of normative information to
individual decisions is a complex
process. No single
individual
is ever represented perfectly by
data collected on large
samples of people.
Therefore
predictions
made on the basis on data
collected on large samples
will not necessarily hold
true for any
particular
individual, which means that
psychologists are often involved in
making educated
guesses
about
an individual based on the knowledge
base accumulated about people in
general.
In
making normative comparisons, the
psychologist must determine the
degree to which a
particular
individual
is similar to the normative sample on
demographic characteristics such as
age, sex, ethnicity,
education,
and economic status. For example, it
would be inaccurate (and inappropriate)
to make
predictions
about an inner city African
American adolescent's performance on a
test if the normative
sample
that is used in deriving
scores was composed only of
middle and upper socioeconomic
status
Caucasian
youth.
VARIABILITY
OF A NORMATIVE SAMPLE
It
can be represented in several ways, but
the most common is based on the mean as a
measure of
central
tendency and the standard deviation as a
measure of variability. The
mean score for a
population
on
a measure is determined by summing all
the scores from a sample
that is representative of the
population
and dividing by the number of individuals
in the sample. For use in
psychological
assessment,
the mean and standard deviation
are often converted to
standard scores that allow
for easy
comparison
across very different
measures.
SELF-REFERENT
STANDARDS
Some
of the judgments that are made as
part of the clinical assessment
process do not
involve
comparisons
to others. Rather, it is important to consider
how much or how little
this person has
changed
over time or across
different situations. In such
instances, the appropriate criterion is
the person
himself
or herself.
Self-referent
standards can also be useful
in determining the initial goals of a
client and the degree to
which
he or she is satisfied with gains
made in treatment. A client seeking help
for a sleep disorder
may
report
substantial satisfaction with being
able to obtain a period of
four to five hours of
uninterrupted
sleep
on a nightly basis if the client
who initiated treatment were unable to
sleep for even a few
minutes
each
night. Self-referent standards in
this case would not be a
replacement for normative
standards,
however,
as it may still be important
for health reasons to strive
for greater gains in treatment until
the
client
is able to achieve the expected seven to
eight hours of sleep per
night.
STEP
4: COLLECTING ASSESSMENT DATA
Methods
to Be Used
As
psychologists make decisions about which
aspects of the person-environment system
are most
relevant
to measure; they must also
decide which of many methods
will be used to assess the
targets that
have
been selected. These choices
include the use of structured or unstructured
clinical interviews,
reviews
of the individual's history
from school or medical records,
measurements of physiological
functioning,
a wide array of psychological
tests self-reports from the
individual, reports from
significant
others
in the individual's life, and methods
for the direct observation
of behavior in the natural
environment
or in simulated conditions in the psychologist's
office.
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Interviews
can be relatively open-ended, following
the preferences or style of the
individual
psychologist,
or highly structured in which a series of
questions are asked in a prescribed
manner and
order
regardless of who administers the
interview.
Physiological
measures can include a
device to monitor heart rate, blood
pressure, skin temperature, or
muscle
tension in a particular area of the
body (e.g., the muscles of the jaw).
Literally hundreds of
psychological
tests have been developed,
most of which are
administered by a psychologist to a
client
on
an individual basis; a smaller number are
administered in a group format.
Psychological tests
include
measures
of intelligence assessments of
neuro-psychological functioning,
objective tests of
personality,
and
projective methods of assessing
personality. Self-report measures have
been designed to assess
symptoms
of specific problems such as depression,
stressful life events,
current concerns and
problems,
or
perceptions of relationships with others.
Direct observation methods
are used to assess
specific
behaviors
as they occur either in the natural
environment or under simulated
conditions in the therapist's
office.
Typically
a psychologist will draw on several of
these methods in conducting a
clinical assessment of a
single
case. The assessment process
often begins with an interview as a
means of obtaining general
information
about the individual and establishing
rapport with the client.
This initial interview may
be
followed
by psychological testing, observations of
behavior, and/or psychological
assessment.
The
choice of methods is influenced by a number of
factors. For example, the age of the
client is an
important
consideration. Adult assessment
typically involves tests and
interviews administered to
the
individual,
whereas child assessment
often involves information
obtained from other
informants (e.g.,
parents,
teachers) on the child's behavior.
The referral question also
plays a significant role in
the
assessment
methods that are used.
The procedures used with an
adult referred for a sexual
dysfunction
will
be quite different than
those used in response to a'
referral for an anxiety
disorder. The selection of
methods
is also strongly influenced by the
psychologist's theoretical orientation and
taxonomy of
psychopathology.
RELIABILITY
AND VALIDITY
The
most fundamental concern
that a clinical psychologist
must face when conducting a
clinical
assessment
centers on the accuracy of the data
she or he collects. Accuracy may be
reflected in the
consistency
of the measure (reliability) and in the
degree to which it reflects the construct of
interest
(Validity).
RELIABILITY
The
first way is determine
accuracy is to consider the reliability of the
information that is
obtained.
Reliability
refers to the consistency of the
observation or measurements that
are made and provides
a
first
step towards ensuring trustworthy
information.
First,
there is test-retest
reliability - the extent to
which an individual makes
similar responses to the
same
test stimuli on repeated
occasions. If each time we
test a person we get different
responses, the test
data
may not be very useful. In
some instances, clients may
remember on the second occasion
their
responses
from the first time. Or they
may develop a kind of
"test-wise ness" from the
first test that
influences
their scores the second time
around. In still other
cases, clients may rehearse
between testing
occasions
or show practice effects.
For
all these reasons, another
gauge of reliability is sometimes
used - equivalent-forms
reliability.
Here,
equivalent or parallel forms of a test
are developed to avoid the
preceding problems. Sometimes it
is
too expensive (in time or
money) to develop an equivalent
form or it is difficult or impossible to
be
sure
the forms are really
equivalent.
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Under
such circumstances, or when retesting is
not practical, assessing
split-half
reliability is a
possibility.
This means that a test is
divided into halves (usually odd-numbered
items versus even-
numbered
items), and participants' scores on the
two halves are compared.
Split-half reliability
also
serves
as one possible index of a test's
internal consistency: Do the items on the test
appear to be
measuring
the same thing? That is, are
the items highly correlated with each
other? The preferred
method
of assessing internal consistency
reliability involves computing the
average of all possible
split-
half
correlations for a given
test.
Another
aspect of reliability is inter-rater
or inter-judge reliability i.e.
index of the degree of
agreement
between two or more raters or judgers as to the
level of a trait that is
present or the
presence/absence
of a features or diagnosis.
VALIDITY
An
assessment method's validity is as
important as determining its
reliability. Validity reflects the
degree
to which an assessment technique
measures what it is designed or intended
to measure. Validity
is
determined by using maximally
different methods to measure the
same construct. Several different
types
of validity exist.
Content
Validity indicates the
degree to which a group of
test items actually covers the
various aspects
of
the variable under
study.
Predictive
Validity is demonstrated
when test scores accurately
predict some behavior or
event in the
future.
Concurrent
Validity involves
relating today's test scores
to a concurrent criterion.
Finally,
Construct
Validity is shown when
test scores relate to other
measures or behaviors in a
logical,
theoretically
expected fashion.
STEP
5: MAKING DECISIONS
The
information obtained in the psychological
assessment process is valuable
only to the extent that
it
can
be used in making important decisions
about the person or persons
who are the focus of
assessment.
The
goals of assessment--diagnosis, screening, prediction, and
evaluation of
intervention--determine
the
types of decisions that are made.
The decisions that are made
on the basis of psychological
assessments
can have profound effects on people's
lives. The process of making
decisions is complex
and
the stakes are high.
Therefore, it is important to understand the factors
that influence the decisions
and
judgments made by clinical psychologists
and ways to optimize the quality of
these decisions.
CLINICAL
VERSUS STATISTICAL
PREDICTION
Because
people, including clinical psychologists,
are faced with a number of obstacles in
the process of
making
judgments about the behavior of other
people, how can the judgment
process be improved?
The
issue
is relatively straightforward. When
clinicians use psychological
assessment data, what is the
best
way
for them to make judgments and
predictions about individuals?
Should the data be combined
using
statistical
methods to make estimates of
probability, or should the information he
combined more
subjectively
by the individual clinician based on
his or her experience? Statistical or
actuarial judgments
or
predictions are made or the
basis of data on large
numbers of individual; that
can be used to
determine
the rates at which certain
events or relationships take place
(base rates) and the
probability
that
an event will happen in the future in
light of current
information.
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Over
100 studies have compared the
use of the clinical and statistical
methods in making judgments in
psychological
assessment, including diagnostic
decisions, evaluations of brain
dysfunction, and
predictions
of future violent behavior,
predictions of work or school performance and
predictions of
positive
response to various forms of
psychological and pharmacological treatment.
The evidence
clearly
shows the superiority of statistical
methods in making judgments. One of the
reasons for the
relative
superiority of statistically based
judgments is that they are
perfectly reliable--they
always
combine
the available information in exactly the
same way. Human information
processing, as we have
already
explained, is not perfectly
reliable but is prone to a
certain inherent level of inconsistency
and
error.
Findings
from research comparing
clinical and statistical methods do
not mean that the clinical
decision-
making
process should be cold and
inhuman, carried out solely
by computers. The role of the
clinician
is
crucial for certain types of
tasks that cannot be conducted adequately
by purely empirical
methods,
including
the generation of hypotheses and the use
of theory in formulating questions. The
important
point
is that statistical methods
are superior for certain
aspects of the process of
psychological
assessment,
freeing psychologists to carry out
other tasks for which
they are uniquely
suited.
STEP
6: COMMUNICATING THE
INFORMATION
After
collecting information that is
pertinent to the evaluation of an
individual and the environments in
which
she or he functions, scoring the measures
that were used, and
interpreting the scores, the
psychologist
is faced with the final task of
clinical assessment: communicating
this information and
interpretations
to the interested parties. This communication
typically takes the form of
a written
psychological
report that is shared with
the client, other professionals
(physicians, teachers, and
other
mental
health professionals), a court of law, or
family members who are
responsible for the client.
The
challenges for psychologists in conveying
assessment information are
many, including the need
to
be
accurate, to provide an explanation of
the basis for their judgments,
and to communicate free of
technical
jargon.
Just
as the assessment process shares
many features with the
process of research, a good
psychological
report
shares many features with a
good research article. It
should begin with an
introduction to the
case,
including a description of the referral
questions that were asked or the
hypotheses that were
tested.
The
methods or assessment procedures
that were used should be described in
sufficient detail so that
the
reader
can understand and evaluate their
quality. The results are
reported next--a clear and
succinct
summary
of the data. Finally, a discussion
and interpretation of the results is
provided, including
recommendations
for future assessment or
intervention.
ETHICAL
ISSUES IN ASSESSMENT
Psychologists
are guided by a general set of rules or a
code of conduct that includes rules
for ethical
conduct
in the psychological assessment process.
These guidelines have been
developed to protect the
best
interests of the clients that
are served by professional psychologists.
Foremost among these
guidelines
are concerns for protecting
clients from abuse by actions of
psychologists, ensuring the
confidentiality
of information that is obtained,
protecting clients' rights to
privacy, ensuring the use
of
procedures
that have well-established reliability
and validity, and using the
results of psychological
assessment
data in the best interests of
clients.
Psychologists
often obtain information
about clients that reflects
the most personal and
intimate aspects
of
their lives. This
information is shared with a
psychologist in the strictest of confidence and
with the
expectation
that no one has a right to
access that information
without the full informed
consent of the
client.
Therefore, clients have the right lo be
aware of and to understand any and
all information that
has
been
obtained as part of the assessment
process, to know where and how
that information is stored, and
to
regulate who has access to
that information.
123
Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
The
clearest example of the need
to protect confidentiality centers on the
disposition of the results of
psychological
tests and written psychological reports.
How are the data and reports
stored? How long
are
they retained? Who has
access to test results and
reports? Information from
clinical assessments of
individuals
is always considered confidential,
regardless of the length of time
since the data were
collected.
Data that were collected from a
person's past must be considered
cautiously, because the
characteristics
that were measured may have
changed significantly over
time.
Although
the concepts of reliability and
validity may appear to be
dry statistical abstractions, they
are
essential
in the fair and ethical
treatment of individuals. The use of a
measure that has either
poor or
unknown
reliability may produce information
about a client that is not
trustworthy. A lack of
reliability
in
a measure indicates that if that
test or procedure were used again it
would not be expected to produce
the
same results. Therefore, an erroneous
judgment could be made
regarding a client's welfare on
the
basis
of this unreliable information. If a
test or procedure is not reliable it
cannot be valid. Lack of
validity
indicates that the results are
not an accurate representation of the
psychological functioning of
the
individual.
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