Laying the foundation for progress research in family, couple, and individual therapy: the development and psychometric features of the initial systemic therapy inventory of change. Psychother Res 2009 Mar;19(2):143-56
Date
02/24/2009Pubmed ID
19235092DOI
10.1080/10503300802669973Scopus ID
2-s2.0-70349239499 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site) 76 CitationsAbstract
This article details the development and methodological characteristics of the Systemic Therapy Inventory of Change (STIC), the first measurement system designed to assess change in family, couple, and individual therapy from a multisystemic and multidimensional perspective. The article focuses specifically on the developmental process that resulted in the five valid and reliable scales that comprise the core measure of the system, the INITIAL STIC, which is administered to clients just before beginning therapy. The scales focus on five systemic domains: individual adult, family of origin, couple, family, and individual child. This article describes the five system scales, the results of the factor analytic process that created them, as well as data on their convergent and discriminant validity.
Author List
Pinsof WM, Zinbarg RE, Lebow JL, Knobloch-Fedders LM, Durbin E, Chambers A, Latta T, Karam E, Goldsmith J, Friedman GAuthor
Lynne Knobloch-Fedders Ph.D. Assistant Professor in the Counselor Education and Counseling Psychology department at Marquette UniversityMESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold
AdolescentAdult
Child
Child, Preschool
Couples Therapy
Factor Analysis, Statistical
Family Therapy
Female
Humans
Male
Psychometrics
Psychotherapy