3.8 Article

Pilot Study of the MAP Curriculum for Psychotherapy Competencies in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY
卷 75, 期 2, 页码 82-88

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AMER PSYCHIATRIC PUBLISHING, INC
DOI: 10.1176/appi.psychotherapy.20210010

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  1. Betty Huse Foundation

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This pilot study aimed to evaluate the relevance, feasibility, acceptability, and instructional efficacy of the Managing and Adapting Practice (MAP) curriculum for enhancing the teaching of psychotherapy to child and adolescent psychiatry (CAP) fellows. The study found that the MAP curriculum was highly relevant to the core competencies of CAP training, and its implementation increased psychotherapy knowledge and application among CAP fellows.
Objective: This pilot study aimed to evaluate the relevance, feasibility, acceptability, and instructional efficacy of the Managing and Adapting Practice (MAP) curriculum for enhancing the teaching of psychotherapy to child and adolescent psychiatry (CAP) fellows. MAP is a system of resources and decision models that supports practitioners in selecting and implementing psychotherapeutic interventions for children and adolescents. The MAP curriculum includes modules to guide education about psychotherapeutic procedures (e.g., behavioral activation) common in evidence-based treatments for an array of childhood problems and to support development of competencies in assessment, treatment planning, and reflective practice. Methods: Curriculum coding was used to examine the relevance of MAP's core components to the skills articulated in the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) CAP milestones. Feasibility, acceptability, and learning outcomes were examined after delivery of the MAP curriculum to 12 CAP fellows at two sites, with instructional features tailored according to faculty preferences and training program structure. Results: Coding suggested that the MAP curriculum was relevant to 95% of the 21 ACGME CAP training sub competencies. Feasibility was indicated by the successful delivery of 100% of the planned MAP curriculum across the two sites. Acceptability was supported by positive feedback from the CAP fellows, and psychotherapy knowledge increased signifi-cantly. Finally, case review scores (mean +/- SD52.21 +/- 0.15) showed positive posttraining application of MAP to two patients and exceeded scores achieved by other samples of mental health professionals. Conclusions: This pilot study demonstrated the potential for the MAP curriculum to support CAP education. MAP's versatility as a curriculum supports broader adoption, with continuing rigorous empirical evaluation.

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