Abstract

This study investigated the interplay between agency and therapeutic bond in predicting patient symptoms in outpatient psychotherapy. A total of N = 731 patients provided measurements of agency (Therapeutic Agency Inventory; TAI), therapeutic bond (bond subscale of Working Alliance Inventory-Short Form Revised [WAI-SR]), and symptoms (Symptom Checklist Short Form [SCL-K11]) every fifth session of long-term treatment for up to 60 sessions. When investigated in separate models, both more agency and a stronger therapeutic bond predicted symptom improvement. However, within-person changes and between-person differences in agency predicted symptom improvement over and above the effects of therapeutic bond. Multilevel response surface analysis was used to further investigate the interplay between agency and therapeutic bond. When both agency and therapeutic bond levels were high, symptoms improved the most. When agency and therapeutic bond ratings differed, symptom ratings were significantly lower when agency exceeded therapeutic bond levels than when therapeutic bond ratings exceeded agency. Findings suggest that both agency and therapeutic bond are important treatment factors, but outcome could be improved when a strong therapeutic bond is combined with an equally strong sense of agency that empowers patients to pursue changes in their lives. When a strong therapeutic bond is present, but the patient feels less agentic, therapists may want to foster agency to improve outcomes. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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