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Research Article

Visualizing Agreement: Bland–Altman Plots as a Supplement to Inter-Rater Reliability Indices

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ABSTRACT

Even when raters demonstrate agreement in the use of a measure, limited score variability or violation of often-ignored statistical assumptions can result in lower reliability estimates than intuitively expected. This article uses data drawn from two randomized controlled trials of schema therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy for the treatment of major depression and binge eating disorder or bulimia nervosa (N = 212) to illustrate the limits of the intraclass coefficient. Randomly selected therapy sessions were rated for therapeutic alliance quality by independent observers using the well-validated Vanderbilt Psychotherapy Process Scale and Vanderbilt Therapeutic Alliance Scale. Scores on subscales related to therapist behavior were restricted, indicating consistent alliance-supportive actions. Inter-rater reliability estimates were low despite high agreement between raters, however. The use of Bland–Altman plots to visualize agreement and data spread is suggested as a useful tool for researchers, consistent with the ideal of exploring reliability from a number of perspectives.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to acknowledge study coordinators and data managers Helen Kleindienst, Caroline Bray, Sarah Rowe, Andrea Bartram and Julia Martin, and Dr James McKay for assistance with code development.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Data availability statement

Data have not been made publicly available for ethical and privacy reasons.

Additional information

Funding

This research was supported by funding from a University of Canterbury Doctoral Scholarship, a Lottery Health Grant, and a Programme Grant from the Health Research Council of New Zealand [Grant number HRC04/292B].

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