Feedback Informed Treatment (FIT)

Overview of Training


Whats include

  • Access to pre-recorded training for 2 weeks after live event

  • Readings and Multiple Choice Quiz

  • CPD/CE Certification

Why use Feedback Informed Treatment

A platform to help you with important treatment decisions

Live Zoom Class 26th March 9.30-4.00 pm GMT

Practitioners of various disciplines and orientations working within human services have similar experiences when delivering therapeutic interventions to their clients. While the interventions delivered are generally effective, keeping people engaged in the treatment process is often difficult, especially those who need it most. Early termination from treatment, poor outcomes and client deterioration make up a large percentage of practitioners caseload.

Feedback Informed Treatment (FIT) is an approach used by counsellors, psychotherapists and social workers. It is a transtheoretical, evidence-based approach for improving the process and outcomes of treatment by keeping clients engaged in the treatment process and by identifying those at risk of not benefiting from services

Benefit of using Feedback Informed Treatment

Feedback as much as doubles the “effect size” (reliable, clinically significant change).

Cuts dropout rates by as much as 50%.

Reduces deterioration by 33%.

A platform for a given client to be an active agent of decision making in the treatment process.

Provision for conducting ongoing practice-based research, localised to the given context, while allowing a comparison with international norms.

Course curriculum

    1. How To Use This Course

    2. Relationship Between Alliance and Outcome First 5 Sessions

    3. Relationship Between Alliance and Outcome Sessions 5-20

    4. Evidence Based practice

    1. Lecture

    1. Extra resources

    1. FIT Quiz

About this course

  • €120,00
  • 7 lessons
  • 0 hours of video content

What Previous Learners Say

Instructor Profile

Daryl Mahon has worked across the health and social care sector for over a decade, as a therapist and social care worker. Currently, he works as a researcher in health and social care with a focus on service reform in complex systems, as well as lecturing in Health and Social Care. He also provides national and international training across a variety of domains such as psychotherapy processes and outcomes; multicultural orientations; feedback-informed treatment and deliberate practice. Daryl is the author of multiple peer reviewed journal articles, as well as his seminal book on trauma responsive organisaitions.