Macdonald James, Cartwright Alan, Brown Gary
Department of Psychological Assessment Consultation and Therapy, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Mental Health NHS Trust, UK.
Psychol Psychother. 2007 Jun;80(Pt 2):247-68. doi: 10.1348/147608306X156553.
Studies have suggested that differences in the effectiveness of therapists may be related to the therapist's ability to maintain a facilitative stance in the face of client resistance or hostility. The current study, examined a sample of audiotaped sessions from Hyams, Cartwright, and Spratley's (1996) study of engagement in an alcohol treatment service in an attempt to see whether the therapists' effectiveness at engaging clients in treatment was related to client-therapist interaction in assessment interviews. It was hypothesized that there would be (1) more overall negative interpersonal behaviour (2) more negative interpersonal behaviour by the therapist and (3) more negative interpersonal complementarity in interviews where the client failed to engage. Structural Analysis of Social Behaviour was used to assess the interpersonal behaviour of clients and therapists in three case comparisons, each of which focused on an engage and a non-engage case provided by one of three participating therapists. An additional series of follow-up qualitative case studies was carried out on the interviews where the client failed to engage. The results were mixed, with the qualitative analyses providing more support for the hypotheses than the quantitative analysis. It was concluded that problematic interpersonal processes might be harder to gauge in assessment sessions than later on in therapy and methodological recommendations were made for enhancing the likelihood of detecting problematic processes in future studies.