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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 May 1.
Published in final edited form as: Psychol Serv. 2015 May;12(2):92–100. doi: 10.1037/ser0000022

Table 2.

Key attitude-related themes, percentage of interviews/focus groups in which theme/subtheme was mentioned, and examples of a definition of evidence-based treatment from 21 interviews and 10 focus groups with clinicians serving American Indian and Alaska Native populations

Attitude-related
themes and
subthemes
Referenced
in
Interviews
(n=21)
Referenced
in Focus
Groups
(n=10)
Exemplary Quote

n (%a) n (%b)
Not culturally relevant 6 (28.6) 3 (30.0) …my only concern about Evidence-Based practices (is) that they’re not typically researched using minority populations. They’re almost exclusively Caucasian. So I don’t think there’s recognition of cultural differences in clients and in populations.
External mandate 2 (9.5) 2 (20.0) It had to be out of that book and that’s how we had to do it.
Western standard 3 (14.3) 2 (20.0) They want to dictate how we should be doing it, you know, from their vaulted ivory tower down there. I just…Oh God, it makes me mad.
Client-centered 2 (9.5) 3 (30.0) Asking a client what they feel they need.
Resource Drain 3 (14.3) 0 Evidence-based is all of that stuff that we just don’t have the money or the staff to do.
Maintaining sobriety 0 2 (20.0) We can show that after sixty days, ninety days, one year … for a fact that we know this person has maintained sobriety.
a

Percentage refers to the percent of Key Informants who referenced the theme

b

Percentage refers to the percent of Focus Groups in which the theme was referenced