scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

The integrative psychotherapy alliance: family, couple and individual therapy scales*

William M. Pinsof, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1986 - 
- Vol. 12, Iss: 2, pp 137-151
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors formally introduce the concept into the family and marital therapy domain and present various clinical hypotheses about the nature of the alliance and its role in familyand marital therapy.
Abstract
The therapeutic alliance concept has been confined primarily to the literature on individual psychotherapy. This paper formally introduces the concept into the family and marital therapy domain and presents various clinical hypotheses about the nature of the alliance and its role in familyand marital therapy. A systemic perspective is brought to bear on the concept within individual psychotherapy. A new, integrative definition of the alliance is presented that conceptualizes individual, couple and family therapy as occurring within the same systemic framework. The implications of this integrative-alliance concept for family, couple and individual therapy research are examined. Three new system-ically oriented scales to measure the alliance in individual, couple and family therapy are presented along with some preliminary data on their methodological characteristics.

read more

Citations
More filters
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

The conceptualization and measurement of therapeutic alliance: an empirical review.

TL;DR: The conceptual and methodological underpinning of current alliance concepts and measures are reviewed with the aim of identifying the current status of the methods and clarifying the conceptual and measurement tasks ahead.
Journal ArticleDOI

Therapeutic alliance and outcome of psychotherapy: historical excursus, measurements, and prospects for research.

TL;DR: The emerging picture suggests that the quality of the client–therapist alliance is a reliable predictor of positive clinical outcome independent of the variety of psychotherapy approaches and outcome measures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Common factors and our sacred models.

TL;DR: A moderate view of common factors is presented, while repudiating the extreme position that there is no difference among treatment models, stresses that there are common factors and mechanisms of change that undergird most forms of successful treatment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Research on the treatment of couple distress

TL;DR: Findings over the decade have been especially promising for integrative behavioral couples therapy and emotion-focused therapy, which are two evidence-based treatments for couples.
References
More filters
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.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predicting the Outcomes of Psychotherapy by the Penn Helping Alliance Rating Method

TL;DR: The Penn Psychotherapy Project reports further progress in its search for the factors predicting the outcomes of psychotherapy through the construction of the Penn Helping Alliance Rating Method, based on two types of patients' statements during psychotherapy sessions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Therapeutic alliance scales: development and relationship to psychotherapy outcome.

TL;DR: The authors describe the development of patient and therapist alliance scales and their application to the therapies of selected patients with good and poor outcomes following brief psychodynamic psychotherapy, and support the value of separating the contributions to the therapeutic alliance made individually by the therapist and the patient.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrative problem‐centered therapy: toward the synthesis of family and individual psychotherapies*

TL;DR: Integrative Problem-Centered Therapy (IPCT) as discussed by the authors is a model for applying different modalities (individual and family) and orientations (behavioral, communicational and psychodynamic) to the broad range of problems patients bring to psychotherapy.
Related Papers (5)