Jason L. Whipple
University of Alaska Fairbanks
26 Papers
69 Citations
Jason L. Whipple is an academic researcher from University of Alaska Fairbanks. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 26 publications. Previous affiliations of Jason L. Whipple include University of Alaska Anchorage & Mental Health Services.
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Papers
Is It Time for Clinicians to Routinely Track Patient Outcome? A Meta‐Analysis
Michael J. Lambert,Jason L. Whipple,Eric J. Hawkins,David A. Vermeersch,Stevan Lars Nielsen,David W. Smart +5 more
TL;DR: It may be time for clinicians routinely and formally to monitor patient treatment response and a meta-analytic review of three large-scale studies suggests that formally monitoring patient progress has a significant impact on clients who show a poor initial response to treatment.
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The Effects of Providing Therapists With Feedback on Patient Progress During Psychotherapy: Are Outcomes Enhanced?
Michael J. Lambert,Jason L. Whipple,David W. Smart,David A. Vermeersch,Stevan Lars Nielsen,Eric J. Hawkins +5 more
TL;DR: Results showed that feedback increased the duration of treatment and improved outcome relative to patients in the control condition who were predicted to be treatment failures, and feedback to therapists resulted in a reduction in the number of treatment sessions without reducing positive outcomes.
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Improving the effects of psychotherapy: The use of early identification of treatment and problem-solving strategies in routine practice.
Jason L. Whipple,Michael J. Lambert,David A. Vermeersch,David W. Smart,Stevan Lars Nielsen,Eric J. Hawkins +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined whether feedback regarding client progress and the use of clinical support tools (CSTs) affected client outcome and number of sessions attended and found that clients in the feedback plus CST group stayed in therapy longer and had superior outcomes.
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Providing feedback to psychotherapists on their patients' progress: clinical results and practice suggestions.
TL;DR: The collective results suggest that measuring, monitoring, and predicting treatment failure (feedback) enhance treatment outcomes for patients who have a negative response.
349
Enhancing psychotherapy outcomes via providing feedback on client progress: a replication
Michael J. Lambert,Jason L. Whipple,David A. Vermeersch,David W. Smart,Eric J. Hawkins,Stevan Lars Nielsen,Melissa K. Goates +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that feedback increased the duration of treatment and improved outcome for clients identified as potential treatment failures, and nearly twice as many clients in the feedback group achieved clinically significant or reliable change and fewer were classified as deteriorated by the time treatment ended.
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