Does establishing fidelity of treatment help in understanding treatment efficacy? Comment on Bellg et al. (2004)

Health Psychol. 2004 Sep;23(5):452-6. doi: 10.1037/0278-6133.23.5.452.

Abstract

Comments on the article by Bellg et al (see record 2004-18051-001). To test the effects of a behavioral change on specific health outcomes, the Behavior Change Consortium insists on strict adherence to fidelity at 5 steps in behavioral trials: study design, provider training, treatment delivery, treatment receipt, and enactment of treatment skills. The authors argue that the demand for fidelity at every step ignores 2 critical sets of factors: (a) there are few theoretically grounded empirical studies of the processes involved in successful transitions in this sequence and (b) trials with perfect fidelity absent a theoretical model of transitions will produce evidence for interventions that lack a conceptual basis for adaptation to differences among diseases, treatments, patients, practitioners, medical institutions, and cultures and that therefore cannot be implemented in clinical practice.

Publication types

  • Comment

MeSH terms

  • Benchmarking*
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy / standards*
  • Controlled Clinical Trials as Topic / standards*
  • Health Behavior*
  • Humans
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Research Design / standards
  • Treatment Outcome