Abstract

The present study was conducted to (a) identify the clients and therapists' perceptual directional discrepancy and temporal congruence in different aspects of working alliance (i.e., goals/tasks and bond), (b) examine the moderating effect of therapists' client-specific self-efficacy on the directional discrepancy and congruence, (c) clarify the relationship between specific working alliance aspects congruence and the next-session symptom, and (d) test the relationship between the congruence of goals/tasks or bond and the psychotherapy outcome under different levels of therapists' self-efficacy. Clients (n = 87, 80.9% female, average age = 21.78 [1.90]) and therapists (n = 43, 65% female) in a Chinese university mental health center evaluated the working alliance session by session. Clients self-reported session-level symptom severity were assessed at the beginning of every session and therapists' self-efficacy for a specific client were assessed at the end of the first session. The truth-and-bias approach was used to analyze the perceptual directional discrepancy and temporal congruence in goals/tasks and bond, and examine the moderating effect of therapists' self-efficacy. Multilevel polynomial regression and response surface analysis were used to clear the relationship between congruence/incongruence and client symptom level in the next session. (a) Clients and therapists temporally agreed on both the goals/tasks and bond dimensions of the working alliance. Averagely, therapists tended to rate goals/tasks agreement lower than clients but did not rate more or less intense bond than clients. (b) Therapists with low or medium self-efficacy for specific client underrated goals/tasks and bond more than therapists with high client-specific efficacy, and among the therapist-client dyads, the higher therapists' client-specific self-efficacy, the higher temporal congruence in bond rather than goals/tasks. (c) For both goals/tasks and bond, when clients and therapists were in agreement, client symptoms decreased as the congruent combinations of therapists' and clients' goals/tasks increased. Clients' symptom level increased more sharply as the degree of discrepancy increases for goals/tasks, not affected by the direction. (d) However, for therapists with high client-specific self-efficacy, their underestimations were more associated with the less severe next-session symptoms of their clients than their overestimations. This association was not found among clients whose therapists' self-efficacies for them were low. The findings provide a deeper insight into the congruence of the working alliance. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

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