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Therapist Awareness of Client Resistance in...
Journal article

Therapist Awareness of Client Resistance in Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Generalized Anxiety Disorder

Abstract

Clients' resistance relates negatively to their retention and outcomes in psychotherapy; thus, it has been increasingly identified as a key process marker in both research and practice. This study compared therapists' postsession ratings of resistance with those of trained observers in the context of 40 therapist-client dyads receiving 15 sessions of cognitive-behavioral therapy for generalized anxiety disorder. Therapist and observer ratings were then examined as correlates of proximal (therapeutic alliance quality and homework compliance) and distal (posttreatment worry severity) outcomes. Although there was reasonable concordance between rater perspectives, observer ratings were highly and consistently related to both proximal and distal outcomes, while therapist ratings were not. These findings underscore the need to enhance therapists' proficiency in identifying important and often covert in-session clinical phenomena such as the cues reflecting resistance and noncollaboration.

Authors

Hara KM; Westra HA; Aviram A; Button ML; Constantino MJ; Antony MM

Journal

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, Vol. 44, No. 2, pp. 162–174

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

March 4, 2015

DOI

10.1080/16506073.2014.998705

ISSN

1650-6073

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