Publication | Closed Access
Enhancing motivation for change in problem drinking: A controlled comparison of two therapist styles.
749
Citations
26
References
1993
Year
CounselingSubstance UseEducationMental HealthPsychologyAlcohol MisuseControlled ComparisonBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryImmediate CheckupAddiction TreatmentMotivationCounseling StylesProblem DrinkingAlcohol AbuseBehavior TherapyApplied Social PsychologyTherapist StylesBehavior Change (Individual)Alcohol DependenceSubstance AbuseCounselor StyleAddictionBehavior ChangeGroup CounselingMedicine
To investigate the impact of counselor style, a 2-session motivational checkup was offered to 42 problem drinkers (18 women and 24 men) who were randomly assigned to 3 groups: (a) immediate checkup with directive-confrontational counseling, (b) immediate checkup with client-centered counseling, or (c) delayed checkup (waiting-list control). Overall, the intervention resulted in a 57% reduction in drinking within 6 weeks, which was maintained at 1 year. Clients receiving immediate checkup showed significant reduction in drinking relative to controls. The 2 counseling styles were discriminable on therapist behaviors coded from audiotapes. The directive-confrontational style yielded significantly more resistance from clients, which in turn predicted poorer outcomes at 1 year. Therapist styles did not differ in overall impact on drinking, but a single therapist behavior was predictive (r = .65) of 1-year outcome such that the more the therapist confronted, the more the client drank.
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