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Journal ArticleDOI

Alliance and dropout in family therapy for adolescents with behavior problems: individual and systemic effects.

TLDR
Findings highlight the importance of alliances in functional family therapy and suggest that how the alliance operates in conjoint family therapy may be a function of systemic rather than of individual processes.
Abstract
This study examined the relationship between alliance and retention in family therapy. Alliance was examined at the individual (parent and adolescent) and family levels (within-family differences). Participants were 34 families who received functional family therapy for the treatment of adolescent (aged 12-18 years) behavior problems. Families were classified as treatment dropouts (n=14) or completers (n=20). Videotapes of the first sessions were rated to identify parent and adolescent alliances with the therapist. Results demonstrated that individual parent and adolescent alliances did not predict retention. However, as hypothesized, dropout cases had significantly higher unbalanced alliances (parent minus adolescent) than did completer cases. These findings highlight the importance of alliances in functional family therapy and suggest that how the alliance operates in conjoint family therapy may be a function of systemic rather than of individual processes.

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Citations
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Meta-analysis of therapeutic relationship variables in youth and family therapy: the evidence for different relationship variables in the child and adolescent treatment outcome literature.

TL;DR: This meta-analysis examines associations between therapeutic relationship variables, and the extent to which they account for variability in treatment outcomes, in 49 youth treatment studies and finds the best predictors of youth outcomes were counselor interpersonal skills, therapist direct influence skills, and youth willingness to participate in treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence-based psychosocial treatments for adolescent substance abuse

TL;DR: A number of other models are probably efficacious, and none of the treatment approaches appeared to be clearly superior to any others in terms of treatment effectiveness for adolescent substance abuse.
Journal ArticleDOI

A meta-analytic review on treatment dropout in child and adolescent outpatient mental health care.

TL;DR: The meta-analytic review showed that dropout percentages were strongly influenced by study design: Percentages were lower in efficacy than in effectiveness studies and within effectiveness studies, the drop out percentages were lower when the therapist's opinion was used rather than when the number of sessions was used as a criterion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Empirically Supported Family‐Based Treatments for Conduct Disorder and Delinquency in Adolescents

TL;DR: Several family-based treatments of conduct disorder and delinquency in adolescents have emerged as evidence-based and, in recent years, have been transported to more than 800 community practice settings, and the developers have developed quality assurance systems to support treatment fidelity and youth and family outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relation of the alliance with outcomes in youth psychotherapy: A meta-analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a meta-analytic review was conducted to provide a reliable estimate of the alliance-outcome relation in youth psychotherapy, and the mean weighted effect size (ES) estimate was r=.14, which is smaller than previous estimates.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The generalizability of the psychoanalytic concept of the working alliance.

TL;DR: Bordin this article reviewed and elaborated the psychoanalytic concept of the working alliance and argued that various modes of psychotherapy can be meaningfully differentiated in terms of the kinds of working alliances embedded in them, and that the strength, rather than the kind of working alliance, will prove to be the major factor in change achieved through psychotherapy.
Book

Coercive Family Process

Journal ArticleDOI

Relation of the therapeutic alliance with outcome and other variables: a meta-analytic review.

TL;DR: The results of the meta-analysis indicate that the overall relation of therapeutic alliance with outcome is moderate, but consistent, regardless of many of the variables that have been posited to influence this relationship.
Book

Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change

TL;DR: The NIMH Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program: Where We Began and Where We Are (I. Elkin, et al. as discussed by the authors ) presents a methodology, design, and evaluation in psychotherapy research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relation between Working Alliance and Outcome in Psychotherapy: A Meta-Analysis.

TL;DR: In this article, the quality of the working alliance (WA) was most predictive of treatment outcomes based on clients' assessments, less so of therapists' assessments and least predictive of observers' report, and a moderate but reliable association between good WA and positive therapy outcome was found.
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