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Saturday, March 30, 2019

Clinical Expertise


BY: American Psychologist May–June 2006

Clinical expertise refers to competence attained by psychologists through education, training, and experience that results in effective practice; the term is not meant to refer to extraordinary performance that might characterize an elite group (e.g., the top 2%) of clinicians.

Clinical expertise is essential for identifying and integrating the best research evidence with clinical data (e.g., information about the patient obtained over the course of treatment) in the context of the patient’s characteristics and preferences to deliver services that have the highest probability of achieving the goals of therapy. Psychologists are trained as scientists as well as practitioners.

An advantage of psychological training is that it fosters a clinical expertise informed by scientific expertise, allowing the psychologist to understand and integrate scientific literature as well as to frame and test hypotheses and interventions in practice as a “local clinical scientist” (Stricker & Trierweiler, 1995).

Cognitive scientists have found consistent evidence of enduring and significant differences between experts and novices undertaking complex tasks in several domains (Be´- dard & Chi, 1992; Bransford, Brown, & Cocking, 1999; Gambrill, 2005).

Experts recognize meaningful patterns and disregard irrelevant information, acquire extensive knowledge and organize it in ways that reflect a deep understanding of their domain, organize their knowledge using functional rather than descriptive features, retrieve knowledge relevant to the task at hand fluidly and automatically, adapt to new situations, self-monitor their knowledge and performance, know when their knowledge is inadequate, continue to learn, and generally attain outcomes commensurate with their expertise.

However, experts are not infallible. All humans are prone to errors and biases. Some of these stem from cognitive strategies and heuristics that are generally adaptive and efficient. Others stem from emotional reactions, which generally guide adaptive behavior as well but can also lead to biased or motivated reasoning (e.g., Ditto & Lopez, 1992; Ditto, Munro, Apanovitch, Scepansky, & Lockhart, 2003; Kunda, 1990).

Whenever psychologists involved in research or practice move from observations to inferences and generalizations, there are inherent risks of idiosyncratic interpretations, overgeneralizations, confirmatory biases, and similar errors in judgment (Dawes, Faust, & Meehl, 2002; Grove, Zald, Lebow, Snitz, & Nelson, 2000; Meehl, 1954; Westen & Weinberger, 2004).

Integral to clinical expertise is an awareness of the limits of one’s knowledge and skills and attention to the heuristics and biases—both cognitive and affective—that can affect clinical judgment. Mechanisms such as consultation and systematic feedback from the patient can mitigate some of these biases. The individual therapist has a substantial impact on outcomes, both in clinical trials and in practice settings (Crits-Christoph et al., 1991; Huppert et al., 2001; Kim, Wampold, & Bolt, in press; Wampold & Brown, 2005).

The fact that treatment outcomes are systematically related to the provider of the treatment (above and beyond the type of treatment) provides strong evidence for the importance of understanding expertise in clinical practice as a way of enhancing patient outcomes.

Components of Clinical Expertise

Clinical expertise encompasses a number of competencies that promote positive therapeutic outcomes. These include

(a) Assessment, diagnostic judgment, systematic case formulation, and treatment planning;
(b) Clinical decision-making, treatment implementation, and monitoring of patient progress;
(c) Interpersonal expertise;
(d) Continual self-reflection and acquisition of skills;
(e) Appropriate evaluation and use of research evidence in both basic and applied psychological science;
(f) Understanding the influence of individual and cultural differences on treatment;
(g) Seeking available resources (e.g., consultation, adjunctive or alternative services) as needed; and
(h) Having a cogent rationale for clinical strategies.

Expertise develops from clinical and scientific training, theoretical understanding, experience, self-reflection, knowledge of research, and continuing professional education and training. It is manifested in all clinical activities, including but not limited to forming therapeutic alliances; assessing patients and developing systematic case formulations, planning treatment, and setting goals; selecting interventions and applying them skillfully; monitoring patient progress and adjusting practices accordingly; attending to patients’ individual, social, and cultural contexts; and seeking available resources as needed (e.g., consultation, adjunctive or alternative services).

Assessment, diagnostic judgment, systematic case formulation, and treatment planning.

The clinically expert psychologist is able to formulate clear and theoretically coherent case conceptualizations, assess patient pathology as well as clinically relevant strengths, understand complex patient presentations, and make accurate diagnostic judgments. Expert clinicians revise their case conceptualizations as treatment proceeds and seek both confirming and disconfirming evidence.

Clinical expertise also involves identifying and helping patients to acknowledge psychological processes that contribute to distress or dysfunction. Treatment planning involves setting goals and tasks of treatment that take into consideration the unique patient, the nature of the patient’s problems and concerns, the likely prognosis and expected benefits of treatment, and available resources. The goals of therapy are developed in collaboration with the patient and consider the patient and his or her family’s worldview and sociocultural context.

The choice of treatment strategies requires knowledge of interventions and the research that supports their effectiveness as well as research relevant to matching interventions to patients (e.g., Beutler, Alomohamed, Moleiro, & Romanelli, 2002; Blatt, Shahar, & Zurhoff, 2002; Norcross, 2002).

Expertise also requires knowledge about psychopathology; treatment process; and patient attitudes, values, and context—including cultural context—that can affect the choice and implementation of effective treatment strategies.

Clinical decision-making, treatment implementation, and monitoring of patient progress.

Clinical expertise entails the skillful and flexible delivery of treatment. Skill and flexibility require knowledge of and proficiency in delivering psychological interventions and the ability to adapt the treatment to the particular case.

Flexibility is manifested in tact, timing, pacing, and framing of interventions; maintaining an effective balance between consistency of interventions and responsiveness to patient feedback; and attention to acknowledged and unacknowledged meanings, beliefs, and emotions.

Clinical expertise also entails the monitoring of patient progress (and of changes in the patient’s circumstances— e.g., job loss, major illness) that may suggest the need to adjust the treatment (Lambert, Bergin, & Garfield, 2004).

If progress is not proceeding adequately, the psychologist alters or addresses problematic aspects of the treatment (e.g., problems in the therapeutic relationship or in the implementation of the goals of the treatment) as appropriate. If insufficient progress remains a problem, the therapist considers alternative diagnoses and formulations, consultation, supervision, or referral.

The clinical expert makes decisions about termination in timely ways by assessing patient progress in the context of the patient’s life, treatment goals, resources, and relapse potential.

Interpersonal expertise.


Central to clinical expertise is interpersonal skill, which is manifested in forming a therapeutic relationship, encoding and decoding verbal and nonverbal responses, creating realistic but positive expectations, and responding empathically to the patient’s explicit and implicit experiences and concerns. Interpersonal expertise involves the flexibility to be clinically effective with patients of diverse backgrounds. Interpersonally skilled psychologists are able to challenge patients in a
supportive atmosphere that fosters exploration, openness, and change.

Psychological practice is, at root, an interpersonal relationship between psychologist and patient. Each participant in the treatment relationship exerts influence on its process and outcome, and the compatibility of psychologist and patient(s) is particularly important. Converging sources of evidence indicate that individual health care professionals affect the efficacy of treatment (American Psychological Association, 2002).

In psychotherapy, for example, individual-therapist effects (within treatment) account for 5%–8% of the outcome variance (Crits-Christoph et al., 1991; Kim et al., in press; Project MATCH Research Group, 1998; Wampold & Brown, 2005). Decades of research also support the contribution of an active and motivated patient to successful treatment (e.g., Bohart & Tallman, 1999; Clarkin & Levy, 2004; W. R. Miller & Rollnick, 2002; Prochaska, Norcross, & DiClemente, 1994).

With the development of interactive electronic technology (e.g., telehealth), many community-wide psychological interventions or other approaches do not necessarily involve direct, face-to-face contact with a psychologist. However, these interventions, to be effective, also engage the patient actively in the treatment process and attend in a flexible manner to individual variations among targeted groups.

The clinical expert fosters the patient’s positive engagement in the therapeutic process, monitors the therapeutic alliance, and attends carefully to barriers to engagement and change. The clinical expert recognizes barriers to progress and addresses them in a way that is consistent with theory and research (e.g., exploring therapeutic impasses with the patient, addressing problems in the therapeutic relationship).

Continual self-reflection and acquisition of skills

Clinical expertise requires the ability to reflect on one’s own experience, knowledge, hypotheses, inferences, emotional reactions, and behaviors and to use that reflection to modify one’s practices accordingly. Integral to clinical expertise is an awareness of the limits of one’s knowledge and skills as well as a recognition of the heuristics and biases (both cognitive and affective) that can affect clinical judgment (e.g., biases that can inhibit recognition of the need to alter case conceptualizations that areinaccurate or treatment strategies that are not working).

Clinical expertise involves taking explicit action to limit the effects of these biases. Developing and maintaining clinical expertise and applying this expertise to specific patients entail the continual incorporation of new knowledge and skills derived from

(a) research and theory;
(b) systematic clinical observation, disciplined inquiry, and hypothesis testing;
(c) self-reflection and feedback from other sources (e.g., supervisors, peers, patients, other health professionals, the patient’s significant others [where appropriate]);
(d) monitoring of patient outcomes; and (e) continuing education and other learning opportunities (e.g., practice networks, patient advocacy groups).

Evaluation and use of research evidence.

Clinical expertise in psychology includes scientific expertise. This is one of the hallmarks of psychological education and one of the advantages of psychological training.

An understanding of scientific method allows psychologists to consider evidence from a range of research designs, evaluate the internal and external validity of individual studies, evaluate the magnitude of effects across studies, and apply relevant research to individual cases.

Clinical expertise also comprises a scientific attitude toward clinical work, characterized by openness to data, clinical hypothesis generation and testing, and a capacity to use theory to guide interventions without allowing theoretical preconceptions to override clinical or research data.

Understanding the influence of individual, cultural, and contextual differences on treatment. Clinical expertise requires an awareness of the individual, social, and cultural context of the patient, including but not limited to age and development, ethnicity, culture, race, gender, sexual orientation, religious commitments, and socioeconomic status (see the Patient Characteristics, Culture, and Preferences section).

Clinical expertise allows psychologists to adapt interventions and construct a therapeutic milieu that respects the patient’s worldview, values, preferences, capacities, and other characteristics (Arnkoff, Glass, & Shapiro, 2002; Sue & Lam, 2002).
APA has adopted practice guidelines on multicultural practice, sexual orientation, and older adults to assist psychologists in tailoring their practices to patient differences (American Psychological Association, 2000, 2003, 2004).

Seeking available resources as needed (e.g., consultation, adjunctive or alternative services).


The psychologist is cognizant that accessing additional resources can sometimes enhance the effectiveness of treatment. When research evidence indicates the value of adjunctive services or when patients are not making progress as expected, the psychologist may seek consultation or make a referral. Culturally sensitive alternative services responsive to a patient’s context or worldview may complement psychological treatment. Consultation for the psychologist is a means to monitor—and correct, if necessary— cognitive and affective biases.

A cogent rationale for clinical strategies.

Clinical expertise requires a planful approach to the treatment of psychological problems. Although clinical practice is often eclectic or integrative (Norcross & Goldfried, 2005), and many effects of psychological treatment reflect nonspecific aspects of therapeutic engagement (e.g., changes that occur through development of an empathic relationship; Lambert et al., 2004; Weinberger, 1995), psychologists rely on well-articulated case formulations, knowledge of relevant research, and the organization provided by theoretical conceptualizations and clinical experience to craft interventions designed to attain desired outcomes.

Some patients have a well-defined issue or disorder for which there is a body of evidence that strongly supports the effectiveness of a particular treatment. This evidence should be considered in formulating a treatment plan, and a cogent rationale should be articulated for any course of treatment recommended. There are many problem constellations, patient populations, and clinical situations for which treatment evidence is sparse.

In such instances, evidence-based practice consists of using clinical expertise in interpreting and applying the best available evidence while carefully monitoring patient progress and modifying
treatment as appropriate (Hayes, Barlow, & Nelson-Gray, 1999; Lambert, Harmon, Slade, Whipple, & Hawkins, 2005; S. D. Miller, Duncan, & Hubble, 2005).

Future Directions


Although much less research is available on clinical expertise than on psychological interventions, an important foundation is emerging (Goodheart, 2006; Skovholt & Jennings, 2004; Westen & Weinberger, 2004). For example, research on case formulation and diagnosis suggests that clinical inferences, diagnostic judgments, and formulations can be reliable and valid when structured in ways that maximize clinical expertise (Eells, Lombart, Kendjelic, Turner, & Lucas, 2005; Persons, 1991; Westen & Weinberger, 2005).

Research suggests that sensitivity and flexibility in the administration of therapeutic interventions produces better outcomes than rigid application of manuals or principles (Castonguay, Goldfried, Wiser, Raue, & Hayes, 1996; Henry, Schacht, Strupp, Butler, & Binder, 1993; Huppert et al., 2001).

Reviews of research on biases and heuristics in clinical judgment have suggested procedures that clinicians might use to minimize those biases (Garb, 1998). Because of the importance of therapeutic alliance to outcome (Horvath & Bedi, 2002; Martin, Garske, & Davis, 2000; Shirk & Karver, 2003), an understanding of the personal attributes and interventions of therapists that strengthen the alliance is essential for maximizing the quality of patient care (Ackerman & Hilsenroth, 2003).

Mutually respectful collaboration between researchers and expert practitioners will foster useful and systematic empirical investigation of clinical expertise. Some of the most pressing research needs are the following:

Studying the practices of clinicians who obtain the best outcomes in the community, both in general
and with particular kinds of patients or problems;
Identifying technical skills used by expert clinicians in the administration of psychological interventions that have proven to be effective;
Improving the reliability, validity, and clinical utility of diagnoses and case formulations;
Studying conditions that maximize clinical expertise (rather than focusing primarily on limits to clinical expertise);
Determining the extent to which errors and biases widely studied in the literature are linked to decrements in treatment outcome and how to modify or correct those errors;
Developing well-normed measures that clinicians can use to quantify their diagnostic judgments, measure therapeutic progress over time, and assess the therapeutic process;
Distinguishing expertise related to common factors shared across most therapies and expertise specific to particular treatment approaches; and
Providing clinicians with real-time patient feedback
to benchmark progress in treatment and clinical support tools to adjust treatment as needed.

References

American Psychologist May–June 2006, , Copyright 2006 by the American Psychological Association 0003-066X/06, Vol. 61, No. 4, p275, 276, 277

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