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"Negative process": A recurrently discovered and underestimated facet of therapeutic process and outcome in the individual psychotherapy of adults.
154
Citations
103
References
1997
Year
Good AllianceEducationMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesClinical PsychologyTherapeutic ProcessTherapeutic RelationshipNegative ProcessCognitive TherapyTherapy OutcomesPsychiatryTherapeutic RapportGood Therapeutic AllianceClinical Counseling TheoriesCounselling PsychologyIndividual TherapyCognitive Behavioral InterventionIndividual PsychotherapyTherapeutic ModelProfessional CounselingTherapyPsychotherapyRelationship CounselingPsychopathology
A good therapeutic alliance is a key contributor to positive outcomes in adult psychotherapy, yet therapists often overestimate their ability to establish and maintain it due to the inherent difficulty of managing interpersonal conflict, a challenge that has been documented across various treatment models and is frequently overlooked in research. The study proposes training therapists in a metacommunication‑based technical strategy to manage negative process and outlines future research directions on this topic. The recommended strategy employs metacommunication techniques to address hostile interchanges between patients and therapists during therapy. Negative process emerges as a major obstacle to successful treatment and its prevalence has been underestimated.
A good therapeutic alliance has proven to be an important contributor to positive outcome in the individual psychotherapies of adults. Treatment models that have been studied include psychodynamic, cognitive, cognitive-behavioral, interpersonal, experiential, and some eclectic approaches. However, the ability of therapists to establish and maintain a good alliance has been greatly overestimated. The reason for this is the enormous difficulty that human beings have in dealing with Interpersonal conflict in which they are participants. Evidence for the ways in which therapists struggle with negative therapeutic process—hostile interchanges between patients and therapists—is traced throughout the psychotherapy research literature. It appears that negative process is a major obstacle to successful treatment, and that its pervasiveness has been underestimated. A therapeutic technical strategy that uses metacommunication is recommended for effectively managing negative process. Training therapists to use this technical strategy is discussed, as are recommendations for future research on the topic of negative process.
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