Motivational interviewing

TitleMotivational interviewing
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2005
AuthorsHettema, J, Steele, J, Miller, WR
JournalAnnual Review of Clinical Psychology
Volume1
Pagination91-111
Publication Languageeng
ISBN Number1548-5943 (Print)
Accession Number17716083
Keywords*Interview, Psychological, *Motivation, Humans, Psychotherapy/education/*methods, Regression Analysis, Substance-Related Disorders/therapy, Treatment Outcome
Abstract

Motivational interviewing (MI) is a client-centered, directive therapeutic style to enhance readiness for change by helping clients explore and resolve ambivalence. An evolution of Rogers's person-centered counseling approach, MI elicits the client's own motivations for change. The rapidly growing evidence base for MI is summarized in a new meta-analysis of 72 clinical trials spanning a range of target problems. The average short-term between-group effect size of MI was 0.77, decreasing to 0.30 at follow-ups to one year. Observed effect sizes of MI were larger with ethnic minority populations, and when the practice of MI was not manual-guided. The highly variable effectiveness of MI across providers, populations, target problems, and settings suggests a need to understand and specify how MI exerts its effects. Progress toward a theory of MI is described, as is research on how clinicians develop proficiency in this method.

URLhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=17716083
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