Journal of consulting and clinical psychology
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J Consult Clin Psychol · Apr 2001
Comparative StudyPredicting adherence to recommendations by parents of clinic-referred children.
The authors examined predictors of parents' adherence to recommendations made by psychologists after the evaluation of clinic-referred children. Parents or legal guardians of 93 children aged 4 to 12 years participated. The major findings were that (a) child behavior problem severity, parent recall of recommendations, parent satisfaction with the child's psychological evaluation, and locus of control were not significantly associated with adherence; (b) number of perceived barriers was the most salient predictor of adherence to recommendations, regardless of recommendation type; and (c) adherence rates to psychological services recommendations were significantly lower, compared with those for school-based or professional nonpsychological recommendations. Implications for more research on predictors of adherence to recommendations and clinical strategies for overcoming barriers to adherence are discussed.