2014
DOI: 10.1093/swr/svu006
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Refining the Evidence-Based Practice Attitude Scale: An Alternative Confirmatory Factor Analysis

Abstract: Barriers to adopting evidence-based practices into real-world mental health organizations have received considerable attention and study. One particular attempt is Aarons’s Evidence-Based Practice Attitude Scale (EBPAS), which measures a worker’s attitudes toward adopting new treatments, interventions, and practices. This study follows Aarons’s work by conducting a confirmatory factor analysis of the EBPAS administered in a large child and family human service agency in New York state (N = 1,273). Replicating … Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…First-order models focus on the subdomains. According to recent standards (31), the four-factor model has yielded poor to acceptable model t (26). The factor loadings have generally been moderate to strong with weakest loadings for Divergence.…”
Section: First-order Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…First-order models focus on the subdomains. According to recent standards (31), the four-factor model has yielded poor to acceptable model t (26). The factor loadings have generally been moderate to strong with weakest loadings for Divergence.…”
Section: First-order Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The construct validity has been studied using different sample sizes (n= 146 vs. n=1,273), in various settings (e.g., mental health, health, correctional service, social service, residential care, educational sector), with participants at different levels (front line providers, administrators, consultants) and diverse cultures (e.g. USA, Europe, Africa, Asia) (13,(23)(24)(25)(26)(27)(28)(29)(30). Different factor models with and without correlated residuals have been tted to the data: a) rst-order models, b) second-order models, and c) a bifactor model.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More than half (54.4%) of the invariance reports appeared in either Research on Social Work Practice (n = 19; 33.3%) or Social Work Research (n =12; 21.1%). Of the 57 articles, only three (Godfrey et al, 2012;Granillo, 2012;Silver Wolf, Dulmus, Maguin, & Fava, 2014) provided adequate information on analytic procedures, reported using robust WLS and a polychoric correlation matrix, and used recommended invariance testing steps. Our review suggests the need among social work researchers for guidance in appropriate invariance testing with ordinal data.…”
Section: Invariance Testing Of Ordinal Data In the Social Work Literamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, EBP is not the standard of care in many healthcare systems across the United States and globe” (Melnyk et al, , p. 16). Nurses tend to work as they have always done, based on experience or tradition and it is challenging to integrate EBP in nursing routines (Richards, Coulthard, Borglin, & team, ; Warren et al, ). EBP is often seen from a hospital context and delivered by professionals with a Bachelor's or Master's degree which is comparable with levels 6 and 7 of the European Qualification Framework (EQF; European‐Commission, ; Gerrish et al, ; Maaskant, Knops, Ubbink, & Vermeulen, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%