Evidence-Based Practice Moves Ahead
Easier Access to Data Boosts Classroom Interest
EBP plays a key role in social work mental health care education,
training and treatment.
By Paul R. Pace, News Staff
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| Illustration: John Michael
Yanson |
The growth of using evidence-based practice (EBP) in the classroom
and in the field for those who teach and work in mental health
care has been highlighted in a detailed report.
Social work educators agree that EBP will continue to play a
key role in social work mental health care education, training
and treatment.
The report, "Partnerships to Integrate Evidence-Based Mental
Health Practices into Social Work Education and Research,"
was drafted by the Institute for the Advancement of Social Work
Research (IASWR). It is based on presentations and discussions
at a symposium in 2007 hosted by the National Institute of Mental
Health (NIMH). The EBP initiative is sponsored by NIMH's Division
of Services and Intervention Research, the Office of Constituency
Relations and Public Liaison and the Office of Special Populations.
While EBP in mental health education has been on the minds of
some university faculty for years, the IASWR report noted that
the practice of using EBP in the classroom and field training
has become more widespread. At the same time, the concept is gaining
support at mental health agencies that appear eager to integrate
proven treatment methods, said Joan Levy Zlotnik, executive director
of IASWR. She noted social workers are the largest providers in
the public and private sectors of mental health services in the
U.S.
Drawing from the Institute of Medicine's definition of evidence-based
medicine as the integration of the best researched evidence and
clinical expertise with patient values, the IASWR report defines
EBP as a process where the practitioner combines well-researched
interventions with clinical experience, ethics and client preferences
and culture to guide and inform the delivery of treatments and
services.
Leonard Gibbs, professor emeritus of social work at the University
of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and author of Evidence-Based Practice
for the Helping Professions, said he defines EBP as incorporating
clinical expertise, client values and preferences and the current
best evidence. "EBP incorporates all three of these elements,"
he said.
The idea of EBP as a learning tool started with Gibbs having
access to a database of program evaluations in the early 1980s.
However, it was a 1997 book, Evidence-Base Medicine, that broke
down the questions into risk/prognosis, diagnosis, treatment effectiveness
and more, Gibbs said. The book inspired his research of using
EBP in the classroom and for assignments, he noted.
Gibbs said the reason EBP is particularly important for mental
health education is how it relates directly to the mission of
mental health work. Those in the field are involved in life-affecting
decisions, he said. "The process of EBP can help to make
better judgments and decisions in league with clients in real
time, as the problems arise," Gibbs said.
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From January 2008 NASW News. © 2008 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
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