Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1083749 Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 2009 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesTreatment outcome studies ought to assess the fidelity of their treatments, including treatment delivery, but practical guidelines and examples for this are lacking. Based on general recommendations in available literature, this study proposes and illustrates the design and application of a Method of Assessing Treatment Delivery (MATD) in a behavioral medicine trial comparing two treatments for chronic low back pain.Study Design and SettingIn designing MATD, two experts identified several feasible treatment elements. Agreement between the experts in classifying these elements into five categories (essential and unique, essential but not unique, unique but not essential, compatible, prohibited) was assessed. In applying MATD, treatment recordings were evaluated by two independent raters, who coded the (non)-occurrence of MATD elements and who categorized each session as belonging to one of the two treatments.ResultsMATDs content validity was supported by adequate agreement between the experts' classifications of the treatment elements. MATDs interrater reliability was good.ConclusionComprehensive illustrations of designing and applying MATD may encourage the verification of treatment delivery as a partial reflection of treatment fidelity in forthcoming treatment outcome studies.

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