Therapeutic Alliance / Working Alliance[edit]

The therapeutic alliance, or the working alliance may be defined as the joining of a client's reasonable side with a therapist's working or analyzing side.[6] Bordin[7] conceptualized the working alliance as consisting of three parts: tasks, goals and bond. Tasks are what the therapist and client agree need to be done to reach the client's goals. Goals are what the client hopes to gain from therapy, based on their presenting concerns. The bond forms from trust and confidence that the tasks will bring the client closer to their goals.


Research on the working alliance suggests that it is a strong predictor of psychotherapy or counseling client outcome.[8] Also, the way in which the working alliance unfolds has been found to be related to client outcomes. Generally, an alliance that experiences a rupture that is repaired is related to better outcomes than an alliance with no ruptures, or an alliance with a rupture that is not repaired. Also, in successful cases of brief therapy, the working alliance has been found to follow a high-low-high pattern over the course of the therapy.[9] Therapeutic alliance has been found to be effective in treating adolescents with PTSD, with the strongest alliances were associated with the greatest improvement in PTSD symptoms. Regardless of other treatment procedures, studies have shown that the degree to which traumatized adolescents feel a connection with their therapist greatly affects how well they do during treatment.[10]

Transference and Counter-Transference[edit]

The concept of therapeutic relationship was described by Freud (1912) as "friendly affectionate feeling" in the form of a positive transference. However, transferences, or more correctly here, the therapist's 'counter-transferences' can also be negative. Today transference (from the client) and counter-transference (from the therapist), is understood as subconsciously associating a person in the present, with a person from a past relationship. For example, you meet a new client who reminds you of a former lover. This would be a counter-transference, in that the therapist is responding to the client with thoughts and feelings attached to a person in a past relationship. Ideally, the therapeutic relationship will start with a positive transference for the therapy to have a good chance of effecting positive therapeutic change.

Acting in

Acting out

Body-centred countertransference

Clinical Psychology

Counselling

Counseling Psychology

Countertransference

Existential counselling

Existential Therapy

Gestalt Therapy

Humanistic Psychology

Intersubjectivity

Interpersonal psychoanalysis

Intersubjective psychoanalysis

Negative therapeutic reaction

Object relations theory

Parallel process

Person-centered therapy

Psychoanalysis

Psychoanalytic Theory

Psychodynamics

Psychodynamic psychotherapy

Psychology

Psychotherapy

Relational psychoanalysis

Relational psychodynamics

Systemic therapy

Systems psychology

Therapeutic alliance

Transference

Transpersonal Psychology