The therapeutic alliance as predictor in the treatment of young people
Background The quality of the therapeutic alliance is an important factor in the treatment of both adult and adolescent patients in psychiatry. Little is known about the importance of the therapeutic alliance among youths who seek help for their substance abuse problems in addiction treatment.
Aim We investigated the importance of first treatment session therapeutic alliance for outcome in youth mental health and addiction treatment, considering both the youths’ and therapists’ perspective.
Method 127 adolescents participated in a prospective clinical cohort study, with favorable or unfavorable treatment outcome after 4 months as primary outcome measure. At the end of the first treatment session, youths and their therapists were asked to rate the therapeutic alliance.
Results Youths’ and therapists’ perceptions about the therapeutic alliance at the start of treatment were predictive of treatment outcome at four months follow-up. In particular, the combined perspective on first-session alliance by both youths and therapists appeared a strong predictor for treatment outcome. If both youths and therapists rated the therapeutic alliance as weak, the percentage of youths showing a favorable treatment outcome was much lower (23%), than if youths and therapists rated the alliance as strong (70%).
Conclusion The present study confirms the importance of a combined perspective on the therapeutic alliance for predicting treatment outcome among patients in youth mental health and addiction treatment.