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Rupture Resolution Questionnaire - T...
~
Hanning Arena, Helen.
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Rupture Resolution Questionnaire - Therapist Version (RRQ-T): Development of a therapist-rated measure of rupture resolution.
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Rupture Resolution Questionnaire - Therapist Version (RRQ-T): Development of a therapist-rated measure of rupture resolution./
Author:
Hanning Arena, Helen.
Description:
96 p.
Notes:
Adviser: Jeremy Safran.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International66-08B.
Subject:
Psychology, Clinical. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3184368
ISBN:
9780542260315
Rupture Resolution Questionnaire - Therapist Version (RRQ-T): Development of a therapist-rated measure of rupture resolution.
Hanning Arena, Helen.
Rupture Resolution Questionnaire - Therapist Version (RRQ-T): Development of a therapist-rated measure of rupture resolution.
- 96 p.
Adviser: Jeremy Safran.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--New School University, 2005.
The last several decades of psychotherapy research have consistently pointed to the therapeutic alliance as one of the most robust predictors of outcome. Some argue that the strength of the alliance is the variable most important to a successful treatment. A new generation of alliance research has begun to focus on more specific and often subtle psychotherapeutic processes thought to have strong implications for treatment success. Several researchers have begun to emphasize fluctuations in the alliance as important therapeutic events in need of further study. Initial research suggests that working through strains in the alliance has a positive effect on the strength of the alliance, thus promoting therapeutic change.
ISBN: 9780542260315Subjects--Topical Terms:
524864
Psychology, Clinical.
Rupture Resolution Questionnaire - Therapist Version (RRQ-T): Development of a therapist-rated measure of rupture resolution.
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Adviser: Jeremy Safran.
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 66-08, Section: B, page: 4483.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--New School University, 2005.
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The last several decades of psychotherapy research have consistently pointed to the therapeutic alliance as one of the most robust predictors of outcome. Some argue that the strength of the alliance is the variable most important to a successful treatment. A new generation of alliance research has begun to focus on more specific and often subtle psychotherapeutic processes thought to have strong implications for treatment success. Several researchers have begun to emphasize fluctuations in the alliance as important therapeutic events in need of further study. Initial research suggests that working through strains in the alliance has a positive effect on the strength of the alliance, thus promoting therapeutic change.
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This study aims to examine the relationship between therapist resolution processes, particularly the presence of optimal therapist states thought to be conducive to resolution, and other measures of therapeutic process and outcome. This was assessed over the course of multiple 30-session psychotherapy treatments at the Brief Psychotherapy Research Project at Beth Israel Medical Center. Therapist resolution processes are measured by the Rupture Resolution Questionnaire - Therapist version (RRQ-T), developed and validated initially as a patient self-report inventory and later revised for use by therapists. This study expected to demonstrate the reliability of this scale, in addition to its concurrent and predictive validity in relation to several well-established process and outcome measures. Subjects included 49 patient-therapist dyads that completed a set of questionnaires after each therapy session and also at the time of intake and termination of treatment.
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The RRQ-T was shown to be a highly reliable measure, with strong levels of internal consistency for the total scale and all but one subscale. Concurrent validity analyses also yielded largely significant results, suggesting that the presence of therapist resolution processes is strongly related to strength of the therapeutic alliance in addition to other measure of psychotherapy process. Predictive validity was not as firmly established and determined to be in need of further analysis. Overall, the RRQ-T was demonstrated to be a useful measure of psychotherapy process, and more specifically of the negotiation of the therapeutic relationship. It is hoped that it will prove to be a valuable tool in future investigations into this complex process.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3184368
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