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1.
Adm Policy Ment Health ; 51(3): 291-305, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38329643

ABSTRACT

In the past decade, there has been an increase in research related to the routine collection and active use of standardized patient data in psychotherapy. Research has increasingly focused on personalization of care to patients, clinical skills and interventions that modulate treatment outcomes, and implementation strategies, all of which appear to enhance the beneficial effects of ROM and feedback. In this article, we summarize trends and recent advances in the research on this topic and identify several essential directions for the field in the short to medium term. We anticipate a broadening of research from the focus on average effects to greater specificity around what kinds of feedback, provided at what time, to which individuals, in what settings, are most beneficial. We also propose that the field needs to focus on issues of health equity, ensuring that ROM can be a vehicle for increased wellbeing for those who need it most. The complexity of mental healthcare systems means that there may be multiple viable measurement solutions with varying costs and benefits to diverse stakeholders in different treatment contexts, and research is needed to identify the most influential components in each of these contexts.


Subject(s)
Psychotherapy , Humans , Feedback , Outcome Assessment, Health Care , Mental Disorders/therapy
2.
Psychother Res ; : 1-11, 2024 Feb 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38348471

ABSTRACT

Feedback-informed treatment (FIT) has been shown to reduce the gap between more and less effective therapists. This study aimed to examine therapists' professional characteristics as potential moderators of the effect of feedback on treatment outcomes.The IAPT-FIT Trial was a clinical trial where therapists were randomly assigned to a FIT group or a usual care control group. Treatment response was monitored using measures of depression (PHQ-9), anxiety (GAD-7) and functional impairment (WSAS). In a secondary analysis of this trial (n = 1,835 patients; t = 67 therapists), we used multilevel modelling to examine interactions between therapists' professional characteristics (e.g., attitude towards and self-efficacy regarding feedback utilization, decision-making style, job satisfaction, burnout, difficulties in practice, coping styles, caseload size) with random allocation (FIT vs. controls) to identify moderators of the effects of feedback.Between 9.6% and 10.8% of variability in treatment outcomes was attributable to therapist effects. Therapist-level caseload sizes and external feedback propensity (EFP) moderated the effect of feedback on depression outcomes. No statistically significant main effects were found for any of the included therapist characteristics.FIT reduced variability in outcomes between therapists and was particularly effective for therapists with high EFP and larger caseloads.

3.
Psychother Res ; 34(4): 518-537, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37311111

ABSTRACT

Objective: Emotion-Focused Skills Training (EFST) is a short-term parental intervention based on humanistic principles. While studies have demonstrated the efficacy of EFST in alleviating child mental health symptoms, the mechanisms by which this happens is less clear. The present study investigated whether program participation led to improvements in the parents' own mental health, emotion regulation, and self-efficacy, and compared two versions of EFST: one experiential involving evocative techniques, and one psychoeducational involving didactic teaching of skills. Further, this study investigated whether improvements in parent outcomes mediated the effects on children's mental health. All parents received 2-days group training and 6 h of individual supervision. Methods: 313 parents (Mage = 40.5, 75.1% mothers) of 236 children (ages 6-13, 60.6% boys) with mental health difficulties within the clinical range and their teachers (N = 113, 82% female) were included. Participants were assessed at baseline, post-intervention, and 4-, 8- and 12-months follow-up. Results: Multilevel analysis showed significant improvements over time on all parental outcomes with large effects (drange0.6-1.1, ps < .001), with fathers benefitting more in terms of emotion regulation and self-efficacy (ps < .05). Significant differences were found between conditions on parental mental health and self-efficacy (all p's > .05). Cross-lagged panel models showed indirect effects of child symptoms at post-intervention on all parental outcomes at 12-months follow-up (ßrange0.30-0.59, ps < .05). Bidirectional associations were observed between children's mental health symptoms and parental self-efficacy (ßrange0.13-0.30, ps < .05). Conclusion: This study provides support for the effect of EFST on parent outcomes and the reciprocal relationship between the mental health of children's and their parents.Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03807336.


Subject(s)
Emotional Regulation , Mental Health , Child , Male , Humans , Female , Parents/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Emotions
4.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37768630

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: In this naturalistic study we aimed to investigate the relationships between two central change processes (affective and cognitive) and two common relationship factors ("Confidence in the therapist" and "Confidence in the treatment"), which have been shown to impact outcomes in a clinical context. We also investigated whether these interrelationships varied across treatment orientations (i.e., cognitive or psychodynamic focused). METHOD: The sample consisted of 631 patients with a primary anxiety or depressive disorder who were admitted to an inpatient program and treated with psychotherapy. The data consisted of weekly measures of cognitive (i.e., "rumination") and affective (i.e., "problems with emotional clarity") change processes as well as scores on Confidence in the therapist and Confidence in the treatment and symptom distress. A multivariate version of the latent curve model with structured residuals was used to investigate the within-patient effects of week-to-week changes in all variables. RESULTS: Initial analyses established that both problems with emotional clarity and rumination predicted symptom distress. Further, we found that higher Confidence in the therapist predicted higher emotional clarity (but not lower rumination) whereas higher Confidence in the treatment predicted lower rumination (but did not affect emotional clarity). Post hoc analyses found that these interrelationships varied across treatment orientation (i.e., cognitive vs. psychodynamic). DISCUSSION: The results indicate that patients' experience of the therapist is associated with emotional change processes, and that patients' experience of the coherence and meaningfulness of treatment, on the other hand, is associated with cognitive change processes. Implications for clinical practice are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

5.
J Couns Psychol ; 69(6): 823-834, 2022 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36136794

ABSTRACT

Previous research suggests that common relationship factors are composed of two overarching factors, "Confidence in the therapist" and "Confidence in the treatment." The aim of this naturalistic process-outcome study was to investigate the reciprocal relationships between these two constructs and patients' symptom level across treatment. The sample consisted of 587 patients who were admitted to an inpatient program and treated with psychotherapy for a range of mental health disorders, such as chronic depression, anxiety disorders, and eating disorders. Our data consisted of weekly measures of symptomatic distress (Patient Health Questionnaire) and the common relationship factors were measured weekly using a newly developed scale. Latent curve modeling with structured residuals was used to investigate the between- and within effects of week-to-week changes in the two components as predictors of subsequent symptom level. An increase in both relationship factors predicted a decrease in subsequent levels of symptoms at the within-patient level, and the other way around, but the two relationship factors did not systematically relate to one another at the within-patient level over the course of treatment. Our findings indicate that patients' perceptions of the therapist as a person and their appraisal of the treatment, are important, different predictors of therapeutic change. Furthermore, they support prior research demonstrating a reciprocal relationship between common relationship factors and symptomatic distress and add to existing common factor theory by exploring the role of two central relationship dimensions and using a method which examines reciprocal relationships and within-patient effects simultaneously. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Subject(s)
Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Humans , Treatment Outcome , Psychotherapy/methods , Depression/psychology , Anxiety Disorders/diagnosis , Anxiety Disorders/therapy
6.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol ; 51(6): 923-939, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35648636

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Emotion-Focused Skills Training (EFST) is a 12-week parental program based on Emotion-Focused Therapy, developed to improve children and adolescents' mental health problems. METHODS: In a randomized clinical dismantling study, including parents of 236 children and adolescents (ages 6-13, Mage 8.9, 60.6% boys, 95.8% Caucasian) with externalizing and/or internalizing problems within clinical range, we examined the efficacy of two versions of EFST: one experiential condition (n = 120) involving emotionally evocative techniques and two-chair interventions, and one psychoeducational only condition (n = 116) involving didactic teaching of emotion skills. Both groups received a 2-day group training and 6 hours of individual supervision. Outcomes were parent- and teacher-reported symptoms at baseline, posttreatment, and 4-, 8-, and 12-month follow-up. Analyses were conducted using multilevel growth curve modeling and Bayesian post hoc analysis. RESULTS: EFST showed efficacy in reducing parent-reported externalizing (b = -1.72, p < .001, d = 1.0) and internalizing (b = -1.71, p < .001, d = 0.9) symptoms, and teacher-reported externalizing (b = -.96, p < .001, d = 0.4), but not internalizing (b = -.13, p > .05, d = 0.2) symptoms. Multilevel analyses showed nonsignificant differences between conditions (all p's > .05), although a Bayesian longitudinal sensitivity analysis indicated a better outcome for the experiential condition. CONCLUSION: EFST showed efficacy in symptom reduction for children and adolescents with internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Outcomes were maintained over 12 months for both conditions, supporting EFST as a transdiagnostic parental approach for early intervention.


Subject(s)
Child of Impaired Parents , Parenting , Child , Adolescent , Male , Humans , Female , Parenting/psychology , Bayes Theorem , Parents/psychology , Child of Impaired Parents/psychology , Emotions
7.
Psychother Res ; 32(1): 3-15, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32404003

ABSTRACT

AbstractObjective: Recently, studies have reported systematic relationships between the therapists' emotional response/countertransference (CT) during therapy and a variety of patient characteristics, speaking to the communicative potential of CT. Within an RCT assessing the role of transference work (TW) in psychodynamic therapy, we investigated whether therapist CT was related to patients' pre-treatment interpersonal problems, degree of personality pathology and motivation for psychodynamic therapy. Secondly, we explored if these relationships depended on whether the therapists used TW or not in sessions. Method: One hundred outpatients were treated with psychodynamic psychotherapy (with or without TW) for one year. Their therapists' emotional reactions after sessions (CT) were assessed with the Feeling Word Checklist-58 (FWC-58). Results: Four subscales of the FWC-58; Inadequate, Confident, Disengaged and Parental feelings were differentially predicted by patient characteristics. Some of the associations depended on treatment condition such that degree of PD pathology was associated with therapists feeling more inadequate in the non-TW-group. Patients' motivation for treatment was associated with less disturbing CT feelings, such as Inadequate and Disengaged CT (the latter especially in the TW group), and feeling more Confident CT. Conclusion: Patient factors predict therapists' emotional countertransference differently depending on whether therapists use transference work in psychodynamic therapy.Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00423462.


Subject(s)
Countertransference , Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic , Emotions , Humans , Personality , Personality Disorders , Professional-Patient Relations
8.
Psychother Res ; 32(2): 139-150, 2022 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33938407

ABSTRACT

Objective: Prior research has established that common therapeutic relationship factors are potent predictors of change in psychotherapy, but such factors are typically studied one at a time and their underlying structure when studied simultaneously is not clear. We assembled empirically validated relationship factors (e.g., therapist empathy; patient expectations; agreement about goals) into a single instrument and subjected it to factor analysis. Method: The instrument was applied to patients (N = 332) undergoing intensive psychotherapy of different types for depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, eating disorders, and childhood trauma in an inpatient specialized mental health setting. In order to examine the psychometric properties of the scale, we used half the sample (N=164) to conduct exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and parallel analysis before we tested the solution using exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) on the second half of the sample (N=168). Measurement invariance analysis was conducted to examine the stability of the factor structure. Results: The analysis yielded two factors, which were termed 1. "Confidence in the therapist" and 2. "Confidence in the treatment." Discussion: When assessed simultaneously, patients differentiate between their evaluation of the therapist and of the treatment. The results indicate that there is substantial overlap among previously established relationship factors.Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03503981.


Subject(s)
Anxiety Disorders , Psychotherapy , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Humans , Mental Health , Psychometrics
9.
J Clin Psychol ; 77(6): 1307-1329, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33449365

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To better understand how therapists facilitate client goal attainment in therapy, we analyzed therapists' future-oriented actions in good outcome cases in which clients recorded high ratings on goal items in the Working Alliance Inventory-Short Revised. METHOD: We selected clients who were within the clinical range (OQ-45.2) at pretreatment, demonstrated reliable change at the end of treatment, and recorded high WAI client goals scores early in treatment. Qualitative analyses of transcripts of the initial three sessions and client posttreatment interviews were integrated into a combined analysis to identify themes across the two separate sets of findings. RESULTS: Therapist future-oriented activity included: (1) Picking up explicit and implicit intentions; (2) using linguistic devices, such as meta-communication, action language, and hedging; (3) using evocative interventions; and (4) nudging the client into practicing change. Core finding: Therapists aligned with clients' directionality in a forward-driven, gradually evolving process. CONCLUSION: Conceptual and clinical implications are discussed.


Subject(s)
Goals , Professional-Patient Relations , Humans , Motivation , Treatment Outcome
10.
Psychother Res ; 31(5): 573-588, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32957850

ABSTRACT

Objective: To better understand the complexity of dyadic processes, such as the mechanisms of the working alliance, researchers recommend taking advantage of innovations in data analytic procedures when studying the interactions between therapists and patients that are associated with favorable therapeutic outcomes. Inspired by a recent line of alliance research using dyadic multilevel modeling, the present study investigated the hypothesis that convergence in the patient-therapist working alliance (i.e., increased similarity in ratings of the alliance across treatment) would be associated with better outcomes. Method: Data were retrieved from two samples: 1. A randomized controlled trial for treatment resistant depression (N = 96 dyads), and 2. An archival dataset of naturalistic psychotherapies from public health care (N = 139 dyads). Multilevel growth curve analysis was employed to investigate the degree of change in session-to-session agreement of global WAI ratings between therapists and patients (i.e., alliance convergence) as a predictor of symptom reduction in the BDI-II and the SCL-90R. Results: Contrary to our expectations, alliance convergence did not predict outcome in either sample, but was negatively associated with symptom severity in Study 2. Implications for understanding the complexity of dyadic processes and alliance work in psychotherapy are discussed.


Subject(s)
Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Humans , Treatment Outcome
11.
Psychother Res ; 31(5): 682-694, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32838694

ABSTRACT

Objective: There is a need to understand more of the dyadic processes in therapy and how the therapist's ways of being are experienced and reflected upon by both patient and therapist. The aim of this dyadic case study was to investigate how the therapist's personal presence was perceived by the patient and the therapist as contributing to change.Method: From a larger project on collaborative actions between patient and therapist, a dyadic case involving in-depth interviews of the therapist and patient was selected to examine the research question. Interpretative phenomenological analysis of four interviews with the therapist and one interview with the patient was conducted.Results: The analyses indicated that the therapist's way of being, as perceived by both therapist and patient, was expressed at a superordinate level through the concept of embodied listening, which was of particular help for the patient, and influenced by the therapist's theoretical orientation, as well as being rooted in his own personal history. Three sub-themes emerged from the analysis, each illustrating how embodied listening contributed to the therapeutic relationship and process. Our findings flesh out how the underlying phenomena of emotional attunement, presence, and genuineness are observable in therapeutic encounters.


Subject(s)
Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Humans
12.
Psychother Res ; 30(4): 417-432, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31122157

ABSTRACT

Objective: Psychotherapists differ notably in the outcomes their patients achieve, and the characteristics that may explain these differences have attracted increasing interest. We systematically review studies on therapist pre-treatment characteristics predicting patient outcomes. Method: Systematic searches on databases for psychotherapy research, clinical psychology, and medical science for the years 2000-2018 identified published research examining therapist characteristics and psychotherapy outcomes. Of 2041 studies, 31 met inclusion criteria. Results: Findings show a few direct effects of therapist intrapersonal variables (e.g., self-relatedness, attachment) and several interaction effects with other constructs (e.g., patient pathology) on outcome. There is little support for the relevance of self-rated social skills. However, more consistent evidence has recently emerged for performance-based measurements of professional interpersonal skills, especially when elicited in challenging situations. Patient outcomes were also predicted by therapists' self-rated professional characteristics, such as their experienced difficulties in practice, coping mechanisms, and attitudes towards therapeutic work, indicating that therapist self-perception also matters, although not always in the direction expected. Conclusions: More effective therapists seem characterized by professionally cultivated interpersonal capacities, which are likely rooted in their personal lives and attachment history. Research guidelines are proposed for moving this field forward (including larger samples, multilevel modeling, and in-depth qualitative work).


Subject(s)
Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapists , Humans , Psychotherapy , Self Concept , Social Skills
13.
Psychother Res ; 28(4): 532-544, 2018 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27616739

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Differences between therapists in their average outcomes (i.e., therapist effects) have become a topic of increasing interest in psychotherapy research in the past decade. Relatively little work, however, has moved beyond identifying the presence of significant between-therapist variability in patient outcomes. The current study sought to examine the ways in which therapist effects emerge over the course of time in psychotherapy. METHOD: We used a large psychotherapy data set (n = 5828 patients seen by n = 158 therapists for 50,048 sessions of psychotherapy) and examined whether outcomes diverge for high-performing (HP) and low-performing (LP) therapists as treatment duration increases. RESULTS: Therapists accounted for a small but significant proportion of variance in patient outcomes that was not explained by differences between therapists' caseload characteristics. The discrepancy in outcomes between HP and LP therapists increased as treatment duration increased (interaction coefficient = 0.071, p < .001). In addition, patients' trajectories of change were a function of their therapist's average outcome as well as the patient's duration of treatment (interaction coefficient = 0.060, p = .040). CONCLUSIONS: Indeed, patterns of change previously described ignoring between-therapist differences (e.g., dose-effect, good-enough level model) may vary systematically when disaggregated by therapist effect.


Subject(s)
Health Personnel/statistics & numerical data , Mental Disorders/therapy , Outcome Assessment, Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Psychotherapy/statistics & numerical data , Work Performance/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Humans , Models, Statistical , Multilevel Analysis , Time Factors
14.
Clin Psychol Psychother ; 24(1): 48-60, 2017 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26450342

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: There are reasons to suggest that the therapist effect lies at the intersection between psychotherapists' professional and personal functioning. The current study investigated if and how the interplay between therapists' (n = 70) professional self-reports (e.g., of their difficulties in practice in the form of 'professional self-doubt' and coping strategies when faced with difficulties) and presumably more global, personal self-concepts, not restricted to the professional treatment setting (i.e., the level of self-affiliation measured by the Structural Analysis of Social Behaviour (SASB) Intrex, Benjamin, ), relate to patient (n = 255) outcome in public outpatient care. METHOD: Multilevel growth curve analyses were performed on patient interpersonal and symptomatic distress rated at pre-, post- and three times during follow-up to examine whether change in patient outcome was influenced by the interaction between their therapists' level of 'professional self-doubt' and self-affiliation as well as between their therapists' use of coping when faced with difficulties, and the interaction between type of coping strategies and self-affiliation. RESULTS: A significant interaction between therapist 'professional self-doubt' (PSD) and self-affiliation on change in interpersonal distress was observed. Therapists who reported higher PSD seemed to evoke more change if they also had a self-affiliative introject. Therapists' use of coping strategies also affected therapeutic outcome, but therapists' self-affiliation was not a moderator in the interplay between therapist coping and patient outcome. CONCLUSION: A tentative take-home message from this study could be: 'Love yourself as a person, doubt yourself as a therapist'. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. KEY PRACTITIONER MESSAGES: The findings of this study suggest that the nature of therapists' self-concepts as a person and as a therapist influences their patients' change in psychotherapy. These self-concept states are presumably communicated through the therapists' in-session behaviour. The study noted that a combination of self-doubt as a therapist with a high degree of self-affiliation as a person is particularly fruitful, while the combination of little professional self-doubt and much positive self-affiliation is not. This finding, reflected in the study title, 'Love yourself as a person, doubt yourself as a therapist', indicates that exaggerated self-confidence does not create a healthy therapeutic attitude. Therapist way of coping with difficulties in practice seems to influence patient outcome. Constructive coping characterized by dealing actively with a clinical problem, in terms of exercising reflexive control, seeking consultation and problem-solving together with the patient seems to help patients while coping by avoiding the problem, withdrawing from therapeutic engagement or acting out one's frustrations in the therapeutic relationship is associated with less patient change.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Psychological , Clinical Competence , Job Satisfaction , Professional Role , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Self Concept , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Norway , Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care , Personality Disorders/diagnosis , Personality Disorders/psychology , Personality Disorders/therapy , Problem Solving
15.
J Couns Psychol ; 63(4): 367-78, 2016 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27124549

ABSTRACT

As established in several studies, therapists differ in effectiveness. A vital research task now is to understand what characterizes more or less effective therapists, and investigate whether this differential effectiveness systematically depends on client factors, such as the type of mental health problem. The purpose of the current study was to examine whether therapists are universally effective across patient outcome domains reflecting different areas of mental health functioning. Data were obtained from 2 sites: the Research Consortium of Counseling and Psychological Services in Higher Education (N = 5,828) in the United States and from primary and secondary care units (N = 616) in Sweden. Outcome domains were assessed via the Outcome Questionnaire-45 (Lambert et al., 2004) and the CORE-OM (Evans et al., 2002). Multilevel models with observations nested within patients were used to derive a reliable estimate for each patient's change (which we call a multilevel growth d) based on all reported assessment points. Next, 2 multilevel confirmatory factor analytic models were fit in which these effect sizes (multilevel ds) for the 3 subscales of the OQ-45 (Study 1) and 6 subscales of CORE-OM (Study 2) were indicators of 1 common latent factor at the therapist level. In both data sets, such a model, reflecting a global therapist effectiveness factor, yielded large factor loadings and excellent model fit. Results suggest that therapists effective (or ineffective) within one outcome domain are also effective within another outcome domain. Tentatively, therapist effectiveness can thus be conceived of as a global construct. (PsycINFO Database Record


Subject(s)
Counseling/methods , Mental Disorders/therapy , Mental Health , Psychotherapy/methods , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Health Personnel , Humans , Male , Mental Disorders/psychology , Middle Aged , Surveys and Questionnaires , Sweden , Treatment Outcome , United States , Young Adult
16.
Clin Psychol Psychother ; 22(4): 317-27, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24574034

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Research has shown that the therapist's contribution to the alliance is more important for the outcome than the patient's contribution (e.g., Baldwin, Wampold, & Imel, 2007); however, knowledge is lacking about which therapist characteristics are relevant for alliance building and development. The objective of this study was to explore the development of the working alliance (using the Working Alliance Inventory), rated by both patients and therapists as a function of therapist in-session experiences. The therapist experiences were gathered by means of the Development of Psychotherapists Common Core Questionnaire (Orlinsky & Rønnestad, 2005). Data from the Norwegian Multisite Study of the Process and Outcome of Psychotherapy (Havik et al., 1995) were used. Multilevel growth curve analyses of alliance scores from Sessions 3, 12, 20 and 40 showed that the therapist factors predicted working alliance levels or growths differently, depending on whether the alliance was rated by patients or by therapists. For example, it emerged that therapists' negative reactions to patients and their in-session anxiety affected patient-rated alliance but not therapist-rated alliance, whereas therapist experiences of flow (Csikszentmihalyi, 1990) during sessions impacted only the therapist-rated alliance. The patterns observed in this study imply that therapists should be particularly aware that their negative experiences of therapy are noticed by, and seem to influence, their clients when they evaluate the working alliance through the course of treatment. KEY PRACTITIONER MESSAGE: The findings of this study suggest that the working alliance is influenced by therapists' self-reported practice experiences, which presumably are communicated through the therapists' in-session behaviours. The study found a notable divergence between practice experiences that influenced the therapists and those that influenced the patients when evaluating the working alliance. Specifically, practitioners' self-reported difficulties in practice, such as their negative reactions to patients and their in-session anxiety, affected patient-rated alliance but not therapist-rated alliance, whereas therapist experiences of 'flow' during sessions impacted only the therapist-rated alliance. Practitioners should note that patient alliance ratings were more likely to be influenced by therapists' negative practice experiences than by positive ones. The divergence in the patient and therapist viewpoints has potential implications for therapist training and supervision and everyday self-reflection.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Cooperative Behavior , Mental Disorders/therapy , Patient Satisfaction/statistics & numerical data , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Norway , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
17.
J Clin Psychol ; 70(2): 160-9, 2014 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24375402

ABSTRACT

This article focuses on the therapist's emotional reactions to a young female client's revelations about her fear of being raped that came up in the course of an open-ended psychodynamic psychotherapy. The client suffered from depression and emotional disturbance related to the overwhelming developmental tasks of adolescence, including individuation and psychosexual development. The patient's fears and nightmares not only raised ethical dilemmas in the therapist regarding how to handle the implications of these revelations but also reactivated the therapist's own issues from her adolescent period. The fact that the material of the patient found a "hook" (Gabbard, 1995) in the therapist enabled a deeper understanding of the patient that helped resolve her inner conflicts and move on in her development.


Subject(s)
Depressive Disorder, Major/therapy , Father-Child Relations , Physicians/psychology , Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic/methods , Sexuality/psychology , Adolescent , Adolescent Development/physiology , Adult , Depressive Disorder, Major/psychology , Female , Humans , Professional-Patient Relations
18.
J Couns Psychol ; 60(4): 483-95, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23957765

ABSTRACT

Research suggests that the person of the psychotherapist is important for the process and outcome of psychotherapy, but little is known about the relationship between therapists' personal experiences and the quality of their therapeutic work. This study investigates 2 factors (Personal Satisfactions and Personal Burdens) reflecting therapists' quality of life that emerged from the self-reports of a large international sample of psychotherapists (N = 4,828) (Orlinsky & Rønnestad, 2004, 2005) using the Quality of Personal Life scales of the Development of Psychotherapists Common Core Questionnaire (Orlinsky et al., 1999). These factors were investigated as predictors of alliance levels and growth (using the Working Alliance Inventory) rated by both patients and therapists in a large (227 patients and 70 therapists) naturalistic outpatient psychotherapy study (Havik et al., 1995). The Personal Burdens scale was strongly and inversely related to the growth of the alliance as rated by the patients, but was unrelated to therapist-rated alliance. Conversely, the factor scale of therapists' Personal Satisfactions was clearly and positively associated with therapist-rated alliance growth, but was unrelated to the patients' ratings of the alliance. The findings suggest that the working alliance is influenced by therapists' quality of life, but in divergent ways when rated by patients or by therapists. It seems that patients are particularly sensitive to their therapists' private life experience of distress, which presumably is communicated through the therapists' in-session behaviors, whereas the therapists' judgments of alliance quality were positively biased by their own sense of personal well-being.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Mental Disorders/therapy , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy/methods , Quality of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Quality of Life/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Female , Health Personnel/psychology , Humans , Male , Mental Disorders/psychology , Middle Aged , Norway , Patient Satisfaction/statistics & numerical data , Personal Satisfaction , Surveys and Questionnaires , Young Adult
19.
Psychother Res ; 23(1): 86-104, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23136986

ABSTRACT

The need for psychotherapy research to understand the therapist effect has been emphasized in several studies. In a large naturalistic study (255 patients, 70 therapists), this topic was addressed using therapists' self-assessed difficulties in practice and interpersonal functioning in therapeutic work as predictors of patient outcome in three conventional outcome measures. Three-level growth curve analyses were employed to assess whether the therapist characteristics, measured by the Development of Psychotherapists Common Core Questionnaire (Orlinsky & Rønnestad, 2005), predicted the level of and change in patient symptom distress (SCL-90R), interpersonal problems (IIP-64), and observer-rated global functioning (GAF). Preliminary estimates of therapist effects in patient change indicated that 4% of change in general symptom distress (GSI), almost 21% of change in IIP global scores, and 28% of growth in GAF could be attributed to therapist differences. The results also demonstrated that certain therapist self-perceptions were clearly related to patient outcome. For example, therapists' scores on a type of difficulty in practice called "Professional self-doubt" (PSD) (denoting doubt about one's professional efficacy) were positively associated with change in IIP global scores. It is suggested that therapists' self-reported functioning can be of value in understanding how individual therapists contribute to therapeutic change although their influence is not necessarily exerted in expected directions.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders/therapy , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Adult , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , Models, Psychological , Predictive Value of Tests , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Psychotherapy/standards , Self Concept , Self Report , Severity of Illness Index , Surveys and Questionnaires , Treatment Outcome , Workforce
20.
Psychother Res ; 20(6): 627-46, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20737352

ABSTRACT

The present study investigated whether and how various therapists' (N = 68) self-reported characteristics relating to their therapeutic work predicted patients' (N = 335) early ratings of the working alliance in a naturalistic psychotherapy study. Results from multilevel modeling demonstrated that certain self-reports accounted well for the therapist effect in the early alliance. The effect of therapists' experiences of difficulties in practice was particularly strong: a negative influence of difficulties termed negative personal reaction (NPR) and a surprising positive influence of another factor, professional self-doubt (PSD), were found. The latter was interpreted as reflecting an attitude of therapist humbleness and sensitivity, which seems to facilitate alliance development. A negative impact of self-reported skills in using one's own and the patients' emotional reactions in the therapeutic relationship (advanced relational skills) was found when controlling for a warm interpersonal style. The negative effect of advanced relational skills depended on the level of NPR difficulties. The findings suggest that therapists should be cautious in using this kind of relational skill unless they experience relating to patients in a warm manner and report low levels of NPR in their practice.


Subject(s)
Physician-Patient Relations , Psychiatry , Adult , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Models, Psychological , Psychiatry/statistics & numerical data , Psychological Tests , Psychotherapy/statistics & numerical data , Self-Assessment
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