Why outcome measures matter before the next session
Outcome measures are most useful when they are part of the clinical conversation, not a separate admin task. A completed PHQ-9, GAD-7, or disorder-specific questionnaire can help therapist and client notice what is changing before the next appointment begins.
Used well, measurement is not about reducing therapy to scores. It gives another lens for reviewing progress, checking risk, spotting stuck points, and deciding whether the current plan needs to adapt.
A better rhythm for review
- Assign the right measure for the client and protocol
- Let the client complete it in their own time
- Review the score trend before the session
- Use the result to guide the agenda and next task
When measures are linked to the active treatment plan, they stop being isolated forms. They become part of the clinical rhythm: plan, practise, measure, review, and adjust.
Where CBT Flow fits
CBT Flow is designed to keep validated questionnaires, severity bands, and progress tracking connected to treatment planning. The intention is to make measurement-informed CBT easier to deliver without adding friction to the session.