background
public health and public policy
evolution of quality and evidence
more evaluation
readings
100

In the USA, how long does it take for new treatments to be delivered within every day
practice?

15-20 years

100

What group does Medicaid provide for?

People who are very low income

100

what is a placebo?

A treatment that is not designed to have a specific effect. Any effect of the
treatment that arises is due to the patient’s expectations.


100

What is randomization?

A ‘coin toss’ to assign patients to one or more groups (happens after participants
have been assessed for eligibility but before the intervention to be studied
begins)

100

What is the key conclusion from Rodriguez-Seijas et al., 2019?

We need to pay attention to diversity within marginalized groups; many
individuals have multiple marginalized identities

200

In the USA, in any 12-month-period, what percent of people have a mental illness?

27%

200

What group does Medicare provide for?

People over age 65

200

What kinds of services does the Berkeley Library provide?

Databases, interlibrary loan, workshops (e.g., Zotero), appointments with
librarians, virtual chat with librarians

200

Why is random allocation of participants to different treatments important?

Reduces selection bias, permits use of probability theory, blinding

200

Vollestead et al., 2012 discuss MABTs as a treatment for what kinds of disorders?

Anxiety disorders

300

n what decade did scientific validation of treatments for mental illness begin?

1950s

300

What is the purpose of the ACA (list the 2 main goals covered in lecture)?

a.Improve access to affordable health insurance (i.e., increase access to care)
b. Create coverage that is more affordable to those who are already insured

300

What is considered the gold standard for clinical trials?

Randomized control trials (RCTs)

300

What is CONSORT (as in what is its function)?

Provides a checklist of essential items that should be included in reports of RCTs

300

Why is preregistration of studies important (Chan et al., 2017)?

It helps identify and deter selective reporting of outcomes

400

In which decades were EBPTs developed?

1960s and 1970s

400

In world rankings, where does the U.S. fall for life expectancy?

29th

400

What is the difference between a systematic review and a meta-analysis?

Meta-analyses are quantitative; systematic reviews are qualitative

400

What does CONSORT stand for?

Consolidated standards of reporting trial

400

Top clinical psychology journals do not appear to be the primary outlets for necessary
work on MH disparities among minoritized groups (Adams & Miller, 2021). What can be
done to prevent discrimination against these articles?

a. Make editorial boards more diverse
b. Prioritize funding to assess mechanisms driving MH disparities
c. Prioritize publishing studies that address mechanisms of MH disparities in top
journals

500

Poverty and mental health challenges have a bidirectional association. What does this
mean?

Poverty contributes to mental health challenges, and mental health challenges
contribute to poverty

500

In world rankings, where does the U.S. fall for infant mortality?

33/38

500

What happens when treatments are given to patients without using the scientific
approach?

a. Drives people to pursue unnecessary treatment
b. People spend money on unproven products
c. Distracts scientists or monopolizes funding

500

What is the purpose of CONSORT? List 3 purposes

a. Improves the clarity and transparency of published trials
b. Helps researchers in designing future trials
c. Guide peer-reviewers and editors in their evaluations of manuscripts

500

What are 2 examples of selectively reported outcomes (Heneghan et al., 2017)?

a. Publication bias (i.e., trials with negative outcomes are often not published)

b. Reporting bias (i.e., a study has been published but measures that wereanalyzed and weren’t significant or perhaps were in the wrong direction were not included in the publication