William Northey

William Northey
  • PhD
  • CEO at Q3 Analytics and Consulting, LLC

About

21
Publications
22,450
Reads
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519
Citations
Current institution
Q3 Analytics and Consulting, LLC
Current position
  • CEO
Additional affiliations
August 2009 - August 2011
Drexel University
Position
  • Visiting Associate Professor

Publications

Publications (21)
Article
Online telesupervision (OTS) is synchronous (real-time) audio and video interactions between a supervisor and a clinician who are not in the same physical location. The COVID-19 pandemic created an abrupt pivot to OTS, requiring systemic supervisors and clinicians to adopt and utilize technologies which were unfamiliar to many. To facilitate the ef...
Article
In this article, the authors present a condensed version of the Marriage and Family Therapy Core Competencies (MFT‐CC), collapsing the original 128 MFT‐CC to 16 using a qualitative research method. Educators, supervisors, and researchers can more easily and efficiently use the condensed MFT‐CC to measure student and supervisee learning for accredit...
Article
Full-text available
Ecosystemic structural family therapy (ESFT) is a systemic, strength-based, and trauma-informed family therapy model that has evolved from structural family therapy (SFT; Minuchin in Families and family therapy, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1974). ESFT is an evidenced-based family therapy approach designed to intervene with families of chil...
Article
The recent initiative by the government to delineate the competencies for the delivery of systemic therapies is groundbreaking and represents a fundamental shift with clinical and political implications. In this article the author compares the process and outcomes utilised in the UK with those embarked on in the USA in 2003, culminating in the crea...
Article
Full-text available
With approximately 50,000 practicing clinicians and regulation in every state and the District of Columbia, marriage and family therapy is firmly established in the United States. This article traces the development of the regulation of the profession, considers the key players in the establishment of the field, and differentiates between the pract...
Article
Full-text available
Adopting a therapeutic model that fits with one's philosophical view of the world is hard enough. Developing one that is empirically validated is a completely different challenge. With some jurisdictions moving toward empirically supported treatments (ESTs) as the standard of care, clinicians need to know how to use ESTs and how to obtain training...
Article
Full-text available
Competency-based training approaches are being used more in healthcare to guide curriculum content and ensure accountability and outcomes in the educational process. This article provides an overview of the state of competency development in the field of behavioral health. Specifically, it identifies the groups and organizations that have conducted...
Article
In this article, I present data from two waves of research on demographic characteristics and practice patterns of marriage and family therapists (MFTs) conducted in 2000 and 2002. The research focuses on the methodological and technological issues in studying this population. Specifically, an online survey with MFTs obtained lower response rates a...
Article
We reviewed the literature on family treatment for childhood behavioral and emotional disorders and found an increase in the number of studies since 1995; however there was significant variation by disorder and therapy model. There is substantially more research on externalizing disorders (i.e., conduct disorder, attention deficit hyperactivity dis...
Article
This report presents data from a telephone survey of a randomly selected sample of 292 marriage and family therapists (MFTs) who were Clinical Members of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy. The study, designed to better understand the current state of the field of MFT, provides descriptive data on the demographic characteristi...
Article
Full-text available
Information was gathered from 485 males younger than 18 being evaluated as possible juvenile sex offenders. More than 60% reported involvement in child molestation, more than 30% in pornography, and 10 to 30% in exhibitionism, fetishism, frottage, voyeurism, obscene phone calls and phone sex. Compared with adult males, juveniles had greater frequen...
Article
Full-text available
Since the inception of specialized treatment for juveniles accused of and adjudicated on sexual offenses (JASOs), denial has been an organizing principle. Most clinicians believe that “breaking through” denial is a necessary prerequisite for successful treatment. Unfortunately, there is little empirical evidence to support this claim. Further, when...
Article
Full-text available
Since the inception of specialized treatment for juveniles accused of and adjudicated on sexual offenses (JASOs), denial has been an organizing principle. Most clinicians believe that breaking through denial is a necessary prerequisite for successful treatment. Unfortunately, there is little empirical evidence to support this claim. Further, when a...
Article
Full-text available
Caught between their child and doing the right thing, families of chronic juvenile delinquents often experience a series of injustices in the name of justice. Attempts by the system to correct the delinquency problem often result in the imposition of values and beliefs that negate the family's values, experiences and meanings of their child's behav...
Article
Full-text available
Includes sample letters. Thesis (Ph. D.)--Kansas State University, 1995. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 301-318).

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