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Published Online: 2007, pp. 109–230

Levels and Patterns of the Therapeutic Alliance in Brief Psychotherapy

Abstract

We examined the relevance of the level and pattern of the therapeutic alliance in 44 cases of three different, manualized 30-session treatments using patient ratings of the Working Alliance Inventory after each session. It was hypothesized that both high-alliance level and either a linear increase in alliance rating or a series of brief rupture-and-repair episodes would be found in successful treatments. We also hypothesized that a more global high-low-high pattern predicted in the literature would not be present. Consistent with the literature, higher alliance levels were found to be related to improved outcome. As predicted, we did not find a global, high-low-high pattern. Local rupture-and-repair patterns were found in 50% of the cases; linear trends were found in 66% of the cases. There was no relationship between outcome and either pattern. We found no differences among the treatments.

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Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychotherapy
Go to American Journal of Psychotherapy
American Journal of Psychotherapy
Pages: 109 - 129
PubMed: 17760317

History

Published in print: 2007, pp. 109–230
Published online: 30 April 2018

Authors

Affiliations

Christopher L. Stevens, Ph.D. [email protected]
Beth Israel Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine
J. Christopher Muran, Ph.D.
Beth Israel Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Jeremy D. Safran, Ph.D.
New School for Social Research and Beth Israel Medical Center
Bernard S. Gorman, Ph.D.
State University of New York and Beth Israel Medical Center.
Arnold Winston, M.D.
Beth Israel Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine

Notes

Mailing address: J. Christopher Muran, Beth Israel Medical Center, Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, First Avenue at 16th Street, New York, New York 10003. e-mail: [email protected] The research presented in this article was supported in part by Grant R03 MH50246 from the National Institute of Mental Health.

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