Abstract

Clients' expectations of treatment have long been posited as an important therapeutic factor in treatment success. Decades of research and meta-analytic findings have supported the notion that client expectations about what will happen over the course of therapy and how beneficial therapy will be are directly related to treatment factors, such as the working alliance and treatment outcome. Client expectations can be categorized into two broad categories, outcome expectations (i.e., how beneficial treatment will be) and treatment expectations (i.e., what will happen in treatment). This study sought to examine clients' treatment expectations, specifically, their role expectations, which represent their beliefs of how their therapists will act in session. Data for this study included 1,233 clients participating in individual counseling with 49 therapists at a university counseling center. Multilevel polynomial regression and response surface analysis were used to test congruent and discrepant effects of clients' pretreatment support and challenge expectancy on reductions in their psychological distress over the course of treatment. Results indicated that reductions in clients' psychological distress were the greatest when their support and challenge expectancy scores were congruent and high. In other words, clients who expected both high challenge and high support from their therapist, prior to the start of counseling, reported the greatest improvement in counseling. Clients similarly reported reductions in their psychological distress when their support and challenge expectations were congruent and low, although this effect was smaller than when they expected high levels of both support and challenge. Together, these findings suggest that when clients' expectations of support and challenge are similar, they fare better in treatment, as opposed to when they expect a greater amount of support than challenge or vice versa. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

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