Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W4205996989> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W4205996989 endingPage "263348952110578" @default.
- W4205996989 startingPage "263348952110578" @default.
- W4205996989 abstract "Most evidence-based treatments (EBTs) for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and anxiety disorders include exposure; however, in community settings, the implementation of exposure lags behind other EBT components. Clinician-level determinants have been consistently implicated as barriers to exposure implementation, but few organizational determinants have been studied. The current study examines an organization-level determinant, implementation climate, and clinician-level determinants, clinician demographic and background factors, as predictors of attitudes toward exposure and changes in attitudes following training.Clinicians (n = 197) completed a 3-day training with 6 months of twice-monthly consultation. Clinicians were trained in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for anxiety, depression, behavior problems, and trauma-focused CBT (TF-CBT). Demographic and background information, implementation climate, and attitudes toward exposure were assessed in a pre-training survey; attitudes were reassessed at post-consultation. Implementation climate was measured at the aggregated/group-level and clinician-level.Attitudes toward exposure significantly improved from pre-training to post-consultation (t(193) = 9.9, p < .001; d = 0.71). Clinician-level implementation climate scores did not predict more positive attitudes at pre-training (p > .05) but did predict more positive attitudes at post-consultation (ß = -2.46; p < .05) and greater changes in those attitudes (ß = 2.28; p < .05). Group-level implementation climate scores did not predict attitudes at pre-training, post-consultation, or changes in attitudes (all ps > .05). Higher frequency of self-reported CBT use was associated with more positive attitudes at pre-training (ß = -0.81; p < .05), but no other clinician demographic or background determinants were associated with attitudes at post-consultation (all p > .05) or with changes in attitudes (all p > .05).Clinician perceptions of implementation climate predicted greater improvement of attitudes toward exposure following EBT training and consultation. Findings suggest that organizational determinants outside of training impact changes in clinicians' attitudes. Training in four EBTs, only two of which include exposure as a component, resulted in positive changes in clinicians' attitudes toward exposure, which suggests non-specialty trainings can be effective at changing attitudes, which may enable scale-up." @default.
- W4205996989 created "2022-01-26" @default.
- W4205996989 creator A5005314595 @default.
- W4205996989 creator A5009862722 @default.
- W4205996989 creator A5033557519 @default.
- W4205996989 creator A5042362331 @default.
- W4205996989 creator A5068703116 @default.
- W4205996989 creator A5083130759 @default.
- W4205996989 date "2021-01-01" @default.
- W4205996989 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W4205996989 title "The impact of implementation climate on community mental health clinicians’ attitudes toward exposure: An evaluation of the effects of training and consultation" @default.
- W4205996989 cites W1898654054 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W1969625656 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W1972940332 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W1977286036 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W1987634243 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W1998561513 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2020155291 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2045393481 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2050484358 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2057008879 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2058172065 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2068097756 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2070012218 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2090335173 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2094042468 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2128459358 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2128928578 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2131256220 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2132091551 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2135162608 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2139689782 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2141403362 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2145064735 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2153210627 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2153795736 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2156151681 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2156580739 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2158978855 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2159999923 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2163659555 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2166084011 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2166612539 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2167758140 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2171271480 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2171464520 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2177617182 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2296352410 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2313267798 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2326727100 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2407484481 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2437077414 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2508744622 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2587651746 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2592610820 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2599076725 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2607531015 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2612838691 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2626608071 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2762923728 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2791827620 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2792149797 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2809136684 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2810873239 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2884113869 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2886710442 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2903742527 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2905792042 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2943271372 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2965580242 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2966280322 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2980786259 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2981110264 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2996087204 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W2996889479 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W3005548358 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W3023532086 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W3025271680 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W3031786051 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W3041337596 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W3045601747 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W3125611646 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W3157365934 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W3181601522 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W4232072428 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W4234180827 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W4252106176 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W4294116629 @default.
- W4205996989 cites W814739761 @default.
- W4205996989 doi "https://doi.org/10.1177/26334895211057883" @default.
- W4205996989 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36210960" @default.
- W4205996989 hasPublicationYear "2021" @default.
- W4205996989 type Work @default.
- W4205996989 citedByCount "3" @default.
- W4205996989 countsByYear W42059969892022 @default.
- W4205996989 countsByYear W42059969892023 @default.
- W4205996989 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W4205996989 hasAuthorship W4205996989A5005314595 @default.