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Clinical competency

Outcome Measure and Assessment Literacy

Teaches clinicians and research staff to understand the purpose, limits, scoring, interpretation, and clinical meaning of psychological measures and study instruments used to evaluate symptoms, functioning, safety, and treatment outcomes.

Primary clinical guidelineModern clinical

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Guidelines

9

Courses

0

Providers

0

Protocols

5

Classification

Source quality

Protocol paperTrial supplement

Also known as

Assessment literacy and outcome administration awarenessAssessment literacy for psychological measuresAssessment literacy for study instrumentsAssessment literacy for study measuresOutcome and assessment literacyOutcome and symptom assessment literacyOutcome measurement literacyPsychometrics and structured assessment literacy

Across the manuals

The manuals converge on the need for therapists and research staff to understand what each measure is for, when it is administered, and how its results relate to symptoms, functioning, safety, and treatment outcomes. Across the extracts, assessment literacy includes knowing whether a measure is clinician-rated, therapist-administered, self-completed, remote, or assessed by a blinded independent rater, and using that information to keep protocol delivery and interpretation aligned with the study design. They also overlap in treating outcome measures as more than score collection. Several manuals link instruments to specific domains such as depression, suicidality, craving, distress, quality of life, cognition, therapeutic alliance, acute psychedelic effects, and tolerability. The sources also repeatedly note the importance of separating therapy from research assessment, preserving consistency in administration, and interpreting patient-reported change alongside clinician-rated severity. The manuals differ mainly in emphasis and instrument set. Some focus heavily on depression and functional outcomes, such as HAM-D-17, MADRS, QIDS-SR-16, SDS, WSAS, and EQ-5D measures, while others centre substance use, craving, and process measures such as TLFB, VAS craving, DDQ, and mindfulness-related scales.

In practice

What it looks like on the ground

  • Accurately identifies whether a measure is clinician-rated, self-report, therapist-administered, or blinded-rater assessed
  • Describes the domain each instrument is intended to capture, such as depression, craving, suicidality, alliance, or acute effects
  • Keeps therapy interactions separate from formal research assessment and avoids contaminating assessment data
  • Uses the protocol timing for screening, baseline, dosing day, post-dose, and follow-up assessments

Assessment signals in the sources

MEQ-30EDIACQTLFB

Synthesised from the linked source documents; refreshed as the library updates.

Linked sources

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Linked guidelines (9)

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Outcome Measure and Assessment Literacy - Clinical Competency | Blossom