The effect of Working Alliance on drug attitude in patients with Major Depressive Disorder [PDF]
Introduction Working Alliance is defined as the emotional bond and the agreement on therapeutic goals and tasks between patients and therapists. Despite the wide use of the construct of working alliance in research on psychotherapy, few studies have ...
G. Santarelli +7 more
doaj +2 more sources
The change of working alliance and the association to treatment outcome in an internet-based therapy after pregnancy loss [PDF]
Background Working alliance is a prominent non-specific factor for treatment outcomes in face-to-face and internet-based interventions. The association between working alliance and therapy outcome appears to be time- and disorder-specific, but less is ...
Martin Kramuschke +4 more
doaj +2 more sources
Observing the Working Alliance in Videoconferencing Psychotherapy for Alcohol Addiction: Reliability and Validity of the Working Alliance Inventory Short Revised Observer [PDF]
The coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has affected the mental health and alcohol consumption of individuals. Videoconferencing psychotherapy has become a fundamental mode of treatment for people with alcohol use disorders.
Nathálya Soares Ribeiro +4 more
doaj +2 more sources
Investigation of causes of ceiling effects on working alliance measures [PDF]
The presence of ceiling effects on measures of working alliance is important because they (a) may moderate the observed size of the alliance-outcome correlation and (b) have implications for how quickly the alliance is formed and when.
Scott T. Meier
doaj +2 more sources
Working alliance and its link to guidance in an internet-based intervention for depressive disorders: a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial [PDF]
BackgroundGuided Internet-based interventions (IBIs) are typically found to be more effective than unguided ones, but the reasons behind this are not well understood.
Raoul Haaf +5 more
doaj +2 more sources
The development of working alliance in early stages of care from the perspective of patients attending a chiropractic teaching clinic [PDF]
Background The clinician-patient relationship has consistently been found to predict treatment success in both physical and mental health settings. This relationship has been operationalised in the literature as “Working Alliance,” which consists of ...
Dima Ivanova +3 more
doaj +2 more sources
Mixed methods systematic review of the literature base exploring working alliance in the chiropractic profession [PDF]
Background The construct of working alliance has been used to operationalise the patient–clinician relationship. Research evidence from the rehabilitation literature has established an association between the construct and several patient outcomes.
Dima Ivanova +4 more
doaj +2 more sources
Working alliance and adherence mediate the effect of guidance in a web-based program for participants with mild to moderate depressive symptoms: A secondary mediation analysis [PDF]
Guided web-based self-help programs for individuals with depressive symptoms have shown to be more efficacious than unguided programs. However, research has paid little attention to why guided interventions are superior.
Oliver Thomas Bur +6 more
doaj +2 more sources
The foundations of the working alliance in assertive community treatment teams [PDF]
Background In this study, we aimed to identify and define the fundamental components of the working alliance in multidisciplinary (Flexible) Assertive Community Treatment teams with shared caseloads, in order to support their daily practice and further ...
M. van Haaren, S. de Jong, D. P. K. Roeg
doaj +2 more sources
The “good enough” facilitator: elucidating the role of working alliance in the mechanism of facilitation [PDF]
Background While facilitation is a widely used implementation strategy with proven effectiveness, the development of the facilitator-recipient relationship, i.e., working alliance, has received limited attention.
Vera Yakovchenko +8 more
doaj +2 more sources

