Exploring a psychotherapeutic change sequence: Relating process to intersessional and posttreatment outcome (original) (raw)
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1993
Abstract
Process was related to intermediate and posttreatment outcomes for 34 patients undergoing multimodal group therapy. Exploratory time series analysis suggested that process variable effects differed with the phase of the therapy. It appeared that an emotionally warm bond occurred between patient and therapist in the sessions prior to therapist-rated improvement. A patient rating of insight followed in subsequent sessions. A negative feedback loop between patient symptom levels and therapist negative patient-directed feelings was demonstrated. Patient dysphoria in later therapy sessions seemed to reflect an earlier therapeutic failure. Ego strength directly exerted its positive influence on outcome in later sessions. The relation between in-therapy process trends and overall outcome supported these findings.
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