Fluctuations in therapist emotions and their relation to treatment processes and outcomes.

Recent research suggests that changes in therapists’ emotions are linked to changes in their client’s pattern of relations and characteristics (Dahl, 2016) during therapy. This is an exploratory study in which we tried to identify how fluctuations in therapist emotions throughout treatment are associated with changes in client symptoms and the working alliance. To do so, we performed multiple regression analyses in which clients’ symptoms and therapeutic alliance were predicted by changes in therapists’ feelings. The analysis was based on 20 subjects (13 females and 7 males aged 18 to 42). In addition, we present two case studies from this sample. We found that fluctuation in a single emotion throughout treatment did not predict symptom reduction or an increase in alliance; however, an interaction between the fluctuation in two emotions did predict symptom change and an increase in the alliance. The findings suggest that therapy outcome is facilitated when therapists are open to different emotional states. Consistently identifying with only one emotion may signal rigidity, which does not facilitate successful outcome. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
Source: Journal of Psychotherapy Integration - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research