The Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC) Initial Scales: Are they sensitive to change?


Journal article


Yaliu He, N. Hardy, R. Zinbarg, Jacob Z. Goldsmith, Amanda Kramer, Alexander L. Williams, W. Pinsof
Psychological Assessment, 2019

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
Cite

Cite

APA   Click to copy
He, Y., Hardy, N., Zinbarg, R., Goldsmith, J. Z., Kramer, A., Williams, A. L., & Pinsof, W. (2019). The Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC) Initial Scales: Are they sensitive to change? Psychological Assessment.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
He, Yaliu, N. Hardy, R. Zinbarg, Jacob Z. Goldsmith, Amanda Kramer, Alexander L. Williams, and W. Pinsof. “The Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC) Initial Scales: Are They Sensitive to Change?” Psychological Assessment (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
He, Yaliu, et al. “The Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC) Initial Scales: Are They Sensitive to Change?” Psychological Assessment, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{yaliu2019a,
  title = {The Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC) Initial Scales: Are they sensitive to change?},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {Psychological Assessment},
  author = {He, Yaliu and Hardy, N. and Zinbarg, R. and Goldsmith, Jacob Z. and Kramer, Amanda and Williams, Alexander L. and Pinsof, W.}
}

Abstract

The Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC) is a multisystemic and multidimensional feedback system that provides therapists feedback about systemic domains of client change in individual, couple, and family therapy over time. The goal of the present study is to investigate the sensitivity to change of the scores of the STIC Initial Scales. In total, 583 clients who voluntarily sought individual, couple, or family therapy services and participated in a randomized controlled trial study were included in the study. Their pre- and posttherapy responses to the STIC Initial measures and corresponding validation measures for individual functioning, couple relationship, child adjustment, and family functioning were compared. The results support the sensitivity to change of the scores of the four STIC Initial Scales investigated: Individual Problems and Strengths (IPS), Relationship with Partner (RWP), Family/Household (FH), and Child Problems and Strengths (CPS). Of particular note, the IPS demonstrated even greater change over time than the BDI-II, BAI, and OQ-45. The discriminant validity of measuring change with the CPS was not supported. Thus, the STIC Initial IPS, RWP, and FH can be usefully employed to measure multisystemic changes in both research and clinical work. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).


Share

Tools
Translate to