2021
DOI: 10.5935/rpot/2021.3.20623
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Avaliação de Treinamento em Entrevistas Investigativas com Crianças Vítimas de Violência Sexual

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(46 reference statements)
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“…An example is the body of research about the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Protocol (Orbach et al, 2000). This evidence-based interview protocol has been used as a tool for training child forensic interviewers internationally (La Rooy et al, 2015) and evaluations have been conducted in non-English-speaking countries such as Canada (Quebec), Israel, Korea, and Brazil (e.g., Cyr & Lamb, 2009; Hackbarth et al, 2015; Lamb et al, 2002; Yi et al, 2016). Training programs partially inspired by the NICHD Protocol have also been evaluated in Sweden and Japan (Cederborg et al, 2013; Naka, 2014).…”
Section: Adaptation and Pilot Of A Training Program To The Chilean Co...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…An example is the body of research about the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Protocol (Orbach et al, 2000). This evidence-based interview protocol has been used as a tool for training child forensic interviewers internationally (La Rooy et al, 2015) and evaluations have been conducted in non-English-speaking countries such as Canada (Quebec), Israel, Korea, and Brazil (e.g., Cyr & Lamb, 2009; Hackbarth et al, 2015; Lamb et al, 2002; Yi et al, 2016). Training programs partially inspired by the NICHD Protocol have also been evaluated in Sweden and Japan (Cederborg et al, 2013; Naka, 2014).…”
Section: Adaptation and Pilot Of A Training Program To The Chilean Co...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Also, although Naka (2014) and Yi et al (2016) mentioned culture-related factors that plausibly challenged the implementation of the NICHD protocol in Japan and Korea (e.g., distinctive communication style and adult–child conversation in East Asian cultures), neither their studies nor the other evaluations in non-English-speaking countries discussed possible cultural factors affecting their results. A cultural perspective could shed light on the underlying causes of unexpectedly low results in some of these studies (e.g., low levels of open-ended questions posttraining, Hackbarth et al, 2015; Yi et al, 2016).…”
Section: Adaptation and Pilot Of A Training Program To The Chilean Co...mentioning
confidence: 99%