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Scientific Inquiry in Social Work: 15.2 Single-subjects design

Scientific Inquiry in Social Work
15.2 Single-subjects design
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Table Of Contents
  5. Student and Instructor Resources
  6. Copyright Information
  7. Acknowledgements and Contributors
  8. Version Information
  9. 1. Introduction to research
    1. 1.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 1.1 How do social workers know what to do?
    3. 1.2 Science and social work
    4. 1.3 Why should we care?
    5. 1.4 Understanding research
  10. 2. Beginning a research project
    1. 2.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 2.1 Getting started
    3. 2.2 Sources of information
    4. 2.3 Finding literature
  11. 3. Reading and evaluating literature
    1. 3.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 3.1 Reading an empirical journal article
    3. 3.2 Evaluating sources
    4. 3.3 Refining your question
  12. 4. Conducting a literature review
    1. 4.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 4.1 What is a literature review?
    3. 4.2 Synthesizing literature
    4. 4.3 Writing the literature review
  13. 5. Ethics in social work research
    1. 5.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 5.1 Research on humans
    3. 5.2 Specific ethical issues to consider
    4. 5.3 Ethics at micro, meso, and macro levels
    5. 5.4 The practice of science versus the uses of science
  14. 6. Linking methods with theory
    1. 6.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 6.1 Micro, meso, and macro approaches
    3. 6.2 Paradigms, theories, and how they shape a researcher’s approach
    4. 6.3 Inductive and deductive reasoning
  15. 7. Design and causality
    1. 7.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 7.1 Types of research
    3. 7.2 Causal relationships
    4. 7.3 Unit of analysis and unit of observation
    5. 7.4 Mixed Methods
  16. 8. Creating and refining a research question
    1. 8.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 8.1 Empirical versus ethical questions
    3. 8.2 Writing a good research question
    4. 8.3 Quantitative research questions
    5. 8.4 Qualitative research questions
    6. 8.5 Feasibility and importance
    7. 8.6 Matching question and design
  17. 9. Defining and measuring concepts
    1. 9.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 9.1 Measurement
    3. 9.2 Conceptualization
    4. 9.3 Operationalization
    5. 9.4 Measurement quality
    6. 9.5 Complexities in quantitative measurement
  18. 10. Sampling
    1. 10.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 10.1 Basic concepts of sampling
    3. 10.2 Sampling in qualitative research
    4. 10.3 Sampling in quantitative research
    5. 10.4 A word of caution: Questions to ask about samples
  19. 11. Survey research
    1. 11.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 11.1 Survey research: What is it and when should it be used?
    3. 11.2 Strengths and weaknesses of survey research
    4. 11.3 Types of surveys
    5. 11.4 Designing effective questions and questionnaires
  20. 12. Experimental design
    1. 12.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 12.1 Experimental design: What is it and when should it be used?
    3. 12.2 Pre-experimental and quasi-experimental design
    4. 12.3 The logic of experimental design
    5. 12.4 Analyzing quantitative data
  21. 13. Interviews and focus groups
    1. 13.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 13.1 Interview research: What is it and when should it be used?
    3. 13.2 Qualitative interview techniques
    4. 13.3 Issues to consider for all interview types
    5. 13.4 Focus groups
    6. 13.5 Analyzing qualitative data
  22. 14. Unobtrusive research
    1. 14.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 14.1 Unobtrusive research: What is it and when should it be used?
    3. 14.2 Strengths and weaknesses of unobtrusive research
    4. 14.3 Unobtrusive data collected by you
    5. 14.4 Secondary data analysis
    6. 14.5 Reliability in unobtrusive research
  23. 15. Real-world research
    1. 15.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 15.1 Evaluation research
    3. 15.2 Single-subjects design
    4. 15.3 Action research
  24. 16. Reporting research
    1. 16.0 Chapter introduction
    2. 16.1 What to share and why we share
    3. 16.2 Disseminating your findings
    4. 16.3 The uniqueness of the social work perspective on science
  25. Glossary
  26. Practice behavior index
  27. Attributions index

15.2 Single-subjects design

Learning Objectives

  • Identify why social workers might use single-subjects design
  • Describe the two stages of single-subjects design

Single-subjects design is distinct from other research methodologies in that, as its name indicates, only one person is being studied. Because clinical social work often involves one-on-one practice, single-subjects designs are often used by social workers to ensure that their interventions are having a positive effect. While the results will not be generalizable, they do provide important insight into the effectiveness of clinical interventions. Single-subjects designs involve repeated measurements over time, usually in two stages.

The baseline stage is the period of time before the intervention starts. During the baseline stage, a social worker would be looking for a pattern to emerge. For example, a person with substance abuse issues may binge drink on the weekends but cut down their drinking during the work week. A substance abuse social worker may ask a client to record their alcohol intake, and probably after a few weeks, would begin to notice this pattern. Ideally, social workers would start measuring a client for a little while before starting their intervention to discover this pattern naturally. Unfortunately, that may be impractical or unethical to do in practice. A retrospective baseline can be attained by asking the client to recollect a few weeks before the intervention started, though it likely to be less reliable than a baseline recorded in real time. The baseline is important because unlike in experimental design, there is no control group. Thus, we have to see if our intervention is effective by comparing the client before and during treatment.

a therapist sits across from a client whose hands are on his head feeling some kind of emotion

The next stage is the treatment stage, and it refers to the time in which the treatment is administered by the social worker. Repeated measurements are taken during this stage to see if your treatment is having the intended effect. But what exactly are we measuring in single-subjects design? Continuing with our example of substance abuse, we could measure the number of drinks that our client consumes in a night. In this example, we should assume that the client’s binge drinking is identified as a problem by the client and it’s a part of their treatment plan. By looking at the number of drinks they consume, we could evaluate the level of alcohol consumption— for example, by looking at how close they are to dangerously high levels of intoxication. We could look for trends— perhaps the client is in crisis and their drinking getting worse by the day. We may also look at variability, like when their binge drinking is most profound—on weekends or when they are around certain family members.

Generally, the measure is graphed on an X-Y axis like in Figure 15.1. The x-axis is time, as measured in days. The y-axis is the problem we’re trying to change, our dependent variable. In Figure 15.1 below, the y-axis is our client’s count of the number of drinks per day. The first fourteen days (or two weeks) our client did not receive any treatment. This is the baseline phase, and we can see the pattern emerge in their drinking. They drink to excess on the weekends. Once our treatment has started on day 15, we can see that pattern decrease somewhat, indicating the treatment is starting to work.

a single-subjects graph with drinks on the y axis and day of the month on the x axis
Figure 15.1 Example x-y graph for single subjects design

By visualizing the data in this way, we can identify patterns for analysis. For example, it looks like our client engages in binge drinking on a weekly basis. Days 5-6, 12-15, and 21-22 all contain the highest number of drinks. Their level of drinking is more moderate on other days, though the total amount is still worrying. This is known as a trend in the data. Our client’s baseline trend is curvilinear, going up for a few days and dipping back down. The baseline phase should extend until a trend is evident. Establishing a trend can prove difficult in clients whose behaviors vary widely. The curvilinear trend reappears in the treatment stage once but does not appear again as expected. This suggests that our intervention may have stopped the client from binging again, though certainly further measurement is warranted to make sure.

Although it may be difficult to see visually, if you do the math, our client consumed about one less drink per day after we started the treatment. On average, the client consumed 3.65 drinks per day in the baseline phase and 2.64 drinks in the treatment phase. While this decrease is encouraging, our client is still engaging in excessive use of alcohol. We may want to further refine and target our intervention. If we were to begin a new course of treatment or add a new dimension to our existing treatment, we would be executing a multiple treatment design. For example, let’s say we revised our treatment on day 30. Our graphing would continue as before, but with another vertical line on day 30, indicating a new treatment began. Another option would be to withdraw our treatment for fifteen days and continue to measure the client, reestablishing a baseline. If the client continues to improve after the treatment is withdrawn, then it is likely to have lasting effects. While I don’t think this is advisable for our client, given their problematic use and the short time in treatment, it may make sense after a period of sobriety has been achieved.

Single-subjects designs, much like evaluation research in the previous section, are used to demonstrate that social work intervention has its intended effects. There was a time in the history of social work in which single-subjects designs were thought to be a method of creating a new scientific foundation for social work (Kirk & Reid, 2002). [1] Social workers were to be practitioner-researchers whose practice would empirically test various interventions, ensure competence and effective practice, and demonstrate measurable change to clients. Most social workers do not receive extensive training in single-subjects designs. More importantly, practitioners may be too overworked or undercompensated to conduct data collection and analysis, given that it is not a reimbursable activity for insurance companies. This is in contrast to evaluation research, for which data collection and analysis are incorporated as part of the grant funding system. For this reason, the practitioner-researcher divide has been bridged mostly through evaluation research and partnerships between practitioners and academic researchers. Agency administrators partner with researchers to implement and test academic ideas in the real-world.

Single-subjects designs are most compatible with clinical modalities such as cognitive-behavioral therapy which incorporate as part of treatment client self-monitoring, clinician data analysis, and quantitative measurement. It is routine in this therapeutic model to track, for example, the number of intrusive thoughts experienced between counseling sessions. Moreover, practitioners spend time each session reviewing changes in patterns during the therapeutic process, using it to evaluate and fine-tune the therapeutic approach. Although researchers have used single-subjects designs with less positivist therapies, such as narrative therapy, the single-subjects design is generally used in therapies with more quantifiable outcomes. The results of single-subjects studies are not generalizable to the overall population, but they help ensure that social workers are not providing useless or counterproductive interventions to their clients.

Key Takeaways

  • Social workers conduct single-subjects research designs to make sure their interventions are effective.
  • Single-subjects designs use repeated measures before and during treatment to assess the effectiveness of an intervention.
  • Single-subjects designs use a graphical representation of numerical data to look for patterns.

Glossary

  • Baseline stage- the period of time before the intervention starts
  • Multiple treatment design- beginning a new course of treatment or add a new dimension to an existing treatment
  • Treatment stage- the time in which the treatment is administered by the social worker
  • Trend- a pattern in the data of a single-subjects design

Image attributions

counseling by tiyowprasetyo CC-0


  1. Kirk, S. A. & Reid, W. J. (2002). Science and social work: A critical appraisal. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. ↵

Annotate

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15.3 Action research
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Copyright © 2018 by Matthew DeCarlo. Scientific Inquiry in Social Work by Matthew DeCarlo is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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