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BACKGROUND: An acceptable, standardised outcome measure to assess efficacy and effectiveness is needed across multiple disciplines offering psychological therapies. AIMS: To present psychometric data on reliability, validity and sensitivity to change for the CORE-OM (Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation--Outcome Measure). METHOD: A 34-item self-report instrument was-developed, with domains of subjective well-being, symptoms, function and risk. Analysis includes internal reliability, test-retest reliability, socio-demographic differences, exploratory principal-component analysis, correlations with other instruments, differences between clinical and non-clinical samples and assessment of change within a clinical group. RESULTS: Internal and test-retest reliability were good (0.75-0.95), as was convergent validity with seven other instruments, with large differences between clinical and non-clinical samples and good sensitivity to change. CONCLUSIONS: The CORE-OM is a reliable and valid instrument with good sensitivity to change. It is acceptable in a wide range of practice settings.
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Chris Evans
University of East London
Janice Connell
University of Sheffield
Michael Barkham
University of Leeds
The British Journal of Psychiatry
University of Leeds
Manchester Royal Infirmary
The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust
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Evans et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a12c31592637892a9a735ad — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.180.1.51
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