Influence of patient and therapist agreement and disagreement about their alliance on symptom severity over the course of treatment : a response surface analysis / Simone Jennissen, Christoph Nikendei, Johannes C. Ehrenthal, Henning Schaeunburg, and Urlike Dinger

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Washington D.C. : American Psychological Association, c2019Description: pages 326-336 : tables, figuresISSN:
  • 0022-0167
Subject(s): Online resources: In: Journal of Counseling Psychology Volume 67, Number 3 (April 2020)Summary: The alliance is dyadic in its nature with both the patient and the therapist contributing. Relatively little is known about the effects of congruence between patient and therapist perception of alliance on treatment outcome. The current study investigated how patient and therapist agreement and disagreement about the alliance predict symptom severity over the course of long-term psychotherapy. We investigated N = 361 patients nested within N = 102 therapists longitudinally every 5th session across long-term treatment. Multilevel polynomial regression with response surface analysis was used to predict symptom severity five sessions later from congruence of the alliance ratings. Throughout treatment, patient and therapist agreement about stronger alliances significantly predicted lower subsequent patient-reported symptom distress. Patient and therapist disagreement was a marginally significant predictor of subsequent symptom distress. There was no significant difference in the effects of alliance agreement and disagreement on symptoms across time in long-term treatment. Findings support the importance of alliance agreement and disagreement as predictors of subsequent patient symptom severity.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 335-336).

The alliance is dyadic in its nature with both the patient and the therapist contributing. Relatively little is known about the effects of congruence between patient and therapist perception of alliance on treatment outcome. The current study investigated how patient and therapist agreement and disagreement about the alliance predict symptom severity over the course of long-term psychotherapy. We investigated N = 361 patients nested within N = 102 therapists longitudinally every 5th session across long-term treatment. Multilevel polynomial regression with response surface analysis was used to predict symptom severity five sessions later from congruence of the alliance ratings. Throughout treatment, patient and therapist agreement about stronger alliances significantly predicted lower subsequent patient-reported symptom distress. Patient and therapist disagreement was a marginally significant predictor of subsequent symptom distress. There was no significant difference in the effects of alliance agreement and disagreement on symptoms across time in long-term treatment. Findings support the importance of alliance agreement and disagreement as predictors of subsequent patient symptom severity.

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