Assessing the Alliance–Outcome Association Adjusted for Patient Characteristics and Treatment Processes

A Meta-Analytic Summary of Direct Comparisons

  • Flückiger, Christoph
  • Del Re, A. C.
  • Wlodasch, Daniel
  • Horvath, Adam O.
  • Solomonov, Nili
  • Wampold, Bruce E.
Journal of Counseling Psychology 67(6):p 706-711, November 2020. | DOI: 10.1037/cou0000424

The alliance is widely recognized as a robust predictor of posttreatment outcomes. However, there is a debate regarding whether the alliance is an epiphenomenon of intake characteristics and/or treatment processes occurring over the course of treatment. This meta-analysis aimed to synthesize the evidence on this issue. We identified 125 effect sizes in 60 independent samples (6,061 participants) of studies that reported alliance−outcome correlations as well as parallel intake or process characteristics. We examined the impact of these potential confounds on the alliance−outcome correlations. We meta-analyzed the studies estimates by computing omnibus effects models as well as multivariate models. We identified 3 variable types that were used to adjust the alliance−outcome correlations: (a) intake characteristics (k = 35); (b) simultaneous processes, such as adherence or competence (k = 13); and (c) both intake and simultaneous processes (k = 24). We found moderate alliance−outcome correlations with or without adjustments for intake and simultaneous processes (range from r = .23 to r = .31). Our results provide robust empirical evidence for the assertion that the alliance−outcome association is an independent process-based factor. Findings suggest that alliance is positively related to outcome above and beyond the studied patient intake characteristics and treatment processes.

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