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1.
J Couns Psychol ; 71(1): 63-76, 2024 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37956033

Using longitudinal client and therapist working alliance ratings, previous research examined how alliance: average value, linear growth, variability, stability (autocorrelation), and partner responsiveness were associated with client outcome. However, no research simultaneously examined all of these dimensions. Omitting important variables in analyses could lead to overestimation of related effects. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine these effects simultaneously. Therapists (N = 45) and clients (N = 236) rated alliance after every session (N = 10,720) and clients completed a measure of psychological distress after every eighth session. We used dynamic structure equation modeling to model longitudinal ratings using the longitudinal actor-partner interaction and location-scale models. Across sessions, there were significant linear growth and significant variability in client and therapist alliance ratings. The variability indicates multiple "V" patterns, which have been associated with alliance ruptures. Both actor effects were significant, showing session-to-session stability for client and therapist alliance. In addition, client-partner effect was significant, indicating higher-than-usual client alliance in a session predicting an increase in therapist alliance in the subsequent session. Growth in neither client-rated nor therapist-rated working alliances was significantly associated with client improvement. Lower variabilities (fewer fluctuations) in both client- and therapist-rated working alliances were associated with better outcomes. Higher therapist-actor and partner effects were associated with client improvement, but client-actor and partner effects were not associated with client improvement. Average working alliances were not associated with client improvement. Implications for practice and research were discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).


Professional-Patient Relations , Psychological Distress , Humans , Databases, Factual , Psychotherapy/methods
2.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 60(3): 237-245, 2023 Sep.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37578782

This article introduces the special issue of Psychotherapy on evidence-based skills and methods and concomitantly, outlines the purposes and processes of the Interorganizational Task Force that guided the work. We provide the rationale for reviewing psychotherapy skills and methods, define and contrast skills and methods with other components of psychotherapy, describe how to assess skills, methods, and outcomes (immediate in-session, intermediate, and distal), how to link skills and methods with outcomes, and how to summarize the extant research on those skills and methods. Finally, we describe how the research reviews of skills and methods lead to training implications and therapeutic practices. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

3.
Psychother Res ; : 1-14, 2023 Aug 18.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37594014

Objective: Although theorists and researchers have stressed the importance of rupture resolution episodes for successful treatment process and outcome, little is known about patients' retrospective reflections about rupture resolution. Aim: The overarching goal of the present study was to use a mixed-method approach to examine patients' retrospective reflections on the frequency, types, and consequences of rupture resolution episodes and the association between rupture resolution episodes and patients' attachment orientation and treatment outcome. Method: Thirty-eight patients diagnosed with major depressive disorder (MDD) were interviewed, on average three years after termination, about their experiences of ruptures in short-term dynamic psychotherapy. Results: Thirty patients reported having experienced at least one rupture, with patients who showed less improvement in depressive symptoms more likely to report having had a rupture. Ruptures were judged as having been successfully resolved for 13 of these patients; suggesting that patients with a high level of attachment anxiety were less likely to be judged as having had a successful resolution. Patients whose ruptures were successfully resolved with the therapist's help reported better treatment process and outcome than patients whose ruptures were not successfully resolved. Conclusion: Results highlight the importance of hearing patients' perspectives on ruptures, rupture resolution, and treatment outcome.

4.
J Couns Psychol ; 70(5): 571-583, 2023 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37227889

Immediacy is a skill therapists use to process the therapeutic relationship in the here and now. Although immediacy has been shown to enhance the therapeutic process, therapists are often reluctant to use it (Hill et al., 2018). In three studies, we developed and tested a measure to assess reasons that therapists avoid using this skill: the Barriers to Using Immediacy Scale (BUIS). In Study 1, 185 North American therapist trainees completed the 45-item pilot measure. Exploratory factor analysis supported a four-factor structure (Concerns About Client Reactions, Concerns About Therapist Reactions, Negative Beliefs About Immediacy, Lack of Skills for Using Immediacy). In Study 2, with an international sample of 352 therapist trainees and professionals, confirmatory factor analyses supported the original four correlated factors model, as well as alternative models. In Study 3, 89 undergraduate students in a helping skills class completed the BUIS at three points during the semester. Students' total barriers and barriers due to a lack of skills decreased, but other perceived barriers did not decrease after training. Across all three studies, predicted correlations of BUIS scores were found with measures of self-efficacy for using immediacy, adherence to different theoretical orientations, communication style, and attachment style. Incremental validity was supported by the association of BUIS scores with measures of open communication and attachment style, after accounting for self-efficacy for immediacy. Limitations and future directions are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Humans , Communication , Students , Emotions
5.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 60(4): 467-476, 2023 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37166938

Although there are theorized connections between client transference and their attachment to their therapists (Bowlby, 1969/1982), limited empirical research exists examining their association over the course of psychotherapy. We thus examined the association between positive and negative transference and client attachment to therapist across the course of open-ended psychodynamic psychotherapy for 49 cases with doctoral student therapists and adult community clients who had at least 32 sessions. Using a Bayesian multilevel structural equation model framework, results indicated that client secure attachment increased and avoidant-fearful attachment decreased across the course of psychotherapy. For clients with higher preoccupied-merger attachment at the beginning of therapy, therapists perceived more fluctuation in negative transference over time than for clients with other attachment styles. Implications for research, practice, and therapist training are offered. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic , Adult , Humans , Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic/methods , Bayes Theorem , Professional-Patient Relations , Object Attachment , Psychotherapy/methods
6.
J Couns Psychol ; 70(4): 396-402, 2023 Jul.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37199956

We studied whether counseling self-efficacy increases after taking a helping skills course as well as whether trainer (instructor) effects are associated with postclass self-efficacy. We surveyed 551 undergraduate students and 27 trainers in helping skills courses across three semesters at one large mid-Atlantic U.S. public university. We found that students reported greater counseling self-efficacy after taking the course. In addition, trainers accounted for small but significant amount of the variance (7%) in changes in counseling self-efficacy. There was evidence that the instructors' authoritative teaching style but not their facilitative interpersonal skills were associated with increases in students' counseling self-efficacy. Implications for helping skills training are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Counseling , Students , Humans , Students/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Social Skills , Self Efficacy
7.
Psychother Res ; 33(7): 821-840, 2023 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37141583

This article serves as both the foreword and the afterword to the special section of Psychotherapy Research devoted to research reviews of psychotherapist skills and methods: it introduces the interorganizational Task Force that guided the reviews and then features its conclusions. We begin by operationally defining therapist skills and methods and then contrasting them with other components of psychotherapy. Next, we consider the typical assessment of skills and methods and how they are linked with outcomes (immediate in-session, intermediate, and distal) in the research literature. We summarize the strength of the research evidence on the skills and methods reviewed in the 8 articles in this special section and in the companion special issue in Psychotherapy. We end with diversity considerations, research limitations, and the formal conclusions of the interorganizational Task Force on Psychotherapy Skills and Methods that Work.


Psychotherapists , Psychotherapy , Humans , Professional-Patient Relations
8.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 60(3): 407-416, 2023 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37036683

We draw recommendations and conclusions from the articles presented in this special issue and the companion special section in Psychotherapy Research on evidence-based therapist skills and methods. For distal (end-of-treatment) outcome, 10 skills/methods were judged to be demonstrably effective (affirmation/validation, paradoxical interventions, homework, routine outcome monitoring, strength-based methods, emotional regulation, imagery rehearsal therapy and exposure relaxation and rescripting therapy for nightmares, meditation/mindfulness/acceptance, behavioral activation, cognitive restructuring) and four were probably effective (rupture repair, role induction, collaborative assessment methods, chairwork). For intermediate (postsession or midtreatment) outcome, one method was judged to be demonstrably effective (cognitive-experiential dreamwork) and two methods probably effective (paradoxical interventions, homework). For immediate (in-session) outcomes, five skills/methods were judged to be probably effective (in-dialog silences, extended silences, role induction, strength-based methods, and emotion regulation). For the rest of the immediate, intermediate, or distal outcomes for skills/methods, there was either no or insufficient research available upon which to base judgments. Possible harmful effects, diversity considerations, and research limitations are summarized. The article ends with training implications, therapeutic practices, and the formal conclusions of the interorganizational Task Force on Psychotherapy Skills and Methods that Work. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Evidence-Based Practice , Psychotherapy , Psychotherapy/education , Psychotherapy/methods , Psychotherapy/standards , Emotional Regulation , Mindfulness , Treatment Outcome , Language , Psychotherapists/education , Task Performance and Analysis , Dreams , Clinical Competence , Humans , Male , Female
9.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 60(3): 295-305, 2023 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36931814

Psychotherapists provide at least some advice, suggestions, and recommendations (ASR) in most treatment approaches. We define ASR, offer clinical examples, and review the research evidence for the immediate in-session, immediate delayed, and intermediate effects of ASR, as well as for the moderators of these effects in individual psychotherapy. In seven studies with 327 clients and 131 therapists, we found evidence of neutral immediate in-session outcomes (e.g., client experiencing levels), neutral immediate delayed outcomes (e.g., client-rated helpfulness during postsession videotape reviews), and positive intermediate outcomes (e.g., implementation of recommendations as rated in subsequent sessions) for ASR. These differences may be related to methodological variations in studies in addition to the different timing of the outcome measurement. In terms of moderators, there is some evidence that the working alliance, client collaboration prior to the ASR, content of the ASR, and therapist and client attachment styles moderate the effects of immediate in-session outcomes, and that type, difficulty, and therapist influence moderate the effects of intermediate outcomes of ASR. We conclude with research limitations, training implications, and therapeutic practices related to ASR. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapists , Humans , Psychotherapy
10.
J Couns Psychol ; 70(2): 172-188, 2023 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36689385

This study aimed to investigate the multilevel factor structure of the therapist and client versions of the 12-item Working Alliance Inventory-Short Revised (WAI; Hatcher & Gillaspy, 2006) in the United States and China, and to create a three-item brief version (WAI-B3) using multilevel factor analysis (M-FA) and multilevel item response theory (M-IRT). We gathered eight data sets from two samples each in United States and China with a total of 21,623 sessions from 376 therapists and 2,455 clients. M-FA results with the first four data sets (two American and two Chinese) suggested that the 12-item WAI across therapist and client versions, and in both United States and China showed a dominant general WA factor with three specific subgroup factors corresponding to the Goal, Task, and Bond items. We then constructed a three-item WAI-B3 by selecting items 11, 10, and 9 through M-IRT, as the best representative of Goal, Task, and Bond subscales, respectively, for both the therapist and client versions in United States and China. With the other four data sets (two American, two Chinese) to test the WAI-B3, we found adequate multilevel reliability, structural validity, and convergent validity with the original 12-item WAI scores. Multilevel measurement invariance tests provided tentative and mixed support for the equivalence of WAI-B3 between the American and Chinese data sets and between therapist and client versions. We recommend that the WAI-B3 be used in routine clinical practice to track therapy process, and that the WAI-B3 be tested with other client and therapist populations and cultures. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Surveys and Questionnaires , Humans , China , Databases, Factual , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Reproducibility of Results , United States , Surveys and Questionnaires/standards
11.
Psychother Res ; 33(3): 387-400, 2023 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35844193

OBJECTIVE: The aims of this study were to develop a revised version of the Meaning In Life Measure (MILM; Hill et al., 2019) and investigate its multilevel measurement invariance at the between-person and within-person levels and multi-group measurement invariance across gender, age, and cultural groups. METHODS: We analyzed an international dataset including data from 1600 sessions with 384 clients in five continents (Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and North America) using multilevel item response theory and multilevel factor analysis. RESULTS: We found that the revised 5-item MILM-5 had satisfactory reliability and structural validity with the overall sample. Further, it demonstrated measurement invariance across the between- and within-person levels, and also across gender and age groups. Across representative countries within continents, the MILM-5 had the same overall factor structure but all factor loadings and item intercepts significantly differed across cultural contexts. Implications are discussed regarding the assessment of meaning in life in international clinical settings.


Reproducibility of Results , Humans , Psychometrics , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Surveys and Questionnaires
12.
Psychother Res ; 33(3): 362-373, 2023 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35650512

To investigate whether there are different antecedents and consequences of different types of therapist questions as this has implications for conducting psychotherapy and for training therapists.We examined the antecedents and consequences of questions for 88 clients working with 33 doctoral student therapists in psychodynamic psychotherapy. Questions were coded into open questions for thoughts (OQT), open questions for feelings (OQF), closed questions for facts (CQF), and closed questions other (CQO). The antecedents and consequences were assessed in terms of self-referring pronouns (SRP), self-referring emotion words (SRE), and number of words.In terms of antecedents, when clients were using a high number of SRP, therapists were more likely to ask OQT and CQO than CQF. When clients were using a high number of SRE, therapists were more likely to ask OQF than CQF. In terms of consequences, clients spoke less after CQF than the other three skills, used fewer SRP after CQF than after CQO, and used more SRE after OQF than CQF.CQO were more similar in terms of antecedents and consequences to OQT and OQF than to CQF.


Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic , Humans , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Emotions
13.
J Couns Psychol ; 70(1): 67-80, 2023 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36074629

This study investigated how client working alliance changed after transferring from one therapist to another: (a) When pre- and post-transfer therapists' attachment anxiety/avoidance were congruently higher or lower and (b) when the pretransfer therapists' attachment anxiety/avoidance were more or less discrepant from the posttransfer therapists. A Tau-U analysis and a multilevel polynomial regression and response surface analysis were used to analyze longitudinal data about 23 transferred clients in open-ended psychodynamic psychotherapy with doctoral-level therapist trainees (n = 29). When first and second therapists' attachment anxiety/avoidance levels were congruent, the higher the two therapists' attachment anxiety and avoidance levels were, the greater was the decrement in clients' ratings of working alliance after transfers. When first and second therapists' attachment anxiety/avoidance levels were discrepant from each other, the more the first and second therapists' attachment were different from each other in terms of anxiety, the greater decrement in clients' ratings of working alliance there was after transfers. Meanwhile, the more the two therapists' attachment avoidance levels were different from each other, the less decrement in clients' ratings of working alliance there was after transfers. Therefore, the attachment orientations of the pre- and post-transfer therapists combined to influence client working alliance after transfers. Limitations and implications of the present research are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).


Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic , Psychotherapy , Humans , Professional-Patient Relations , Anxiety , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Databases, Factual
14.
Couns Psychol Q ; 35(3): 546-561, 2022.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36439991

We investigated the impact of a 1.5 hr workshop based on mindfulness-based compassion practices (MBCP) for 6 doctoral student therapists, followed by these therapists engaging in pre-session preparation for each of their clients in one of 3 randomly assigned conditions (MBCP, self-supervision, preparation-as-usual) over a 1-month period. State mindfulness and meditation self-efficacy increased following the workshop. Therapist ratings of session effectiveness were higher following pre-session meditation relative to preparation-as-usual, although there were no client-rated differences in session outcome. In a focus group, therapists reported that the workshop was generally helpful, and noted that pre-session MBCP led to a positive state of being and increased selfcare. However, they felt rushed to fit in the exercises and some doubted their meditation self-efficacy. They suggested that longer, at-home practice might be more beneficial than pre-session exercises. We encourage replication in larger samples varying the amount and format of meditation training for improving outcomes.

15.
J Couns Psychol ; 69(6): 812-822, 2022 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35980707

The authors examined how stability/change in working alliance predicted subsequent symptoms, and how stability/change in symptoms predicted subsequent alliance in a sample of 188 adult clients with 44 doctoral student therapists over the course of 893 eight-session time periods of individual psychodynamic psychotherapy. Clients completed the Working Alliance Inventory-Short Revised (WAI-SR; Hatcher & Gillaspy, 2006) after every session and the Outcome Questionnaire-45 (OQ; Lambert et al., 1996) before intake and every eighth session. The authors used multilevel polynomial regression and response surface analyses to examine within-client effects. The authors found that change in the alliance across an eight-session period did not have an immediate temporal effect on symptoms, but when alliance was stable and stronger compared to other periods, subsequent symptoms were lower. Similarly, change in symptoms across an eight-session period did not have an immediate temporal effect on alliance, but when symptoms were stable and lower compared to other periods, subsequent alliance was stronger. These results suggest that sustained improvements in the alliance contribute to subsequent symptom improvements, and vice versa. The authors conclude that it is important to work to improve and maintain improvements in the working alliance and symptoms. Limitations and future directions are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic , Therapeutic Alliance , Adult , Humans , Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic/methods , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy/methods , Treatment Outcome
16.
J Couns Psychol ; 69(6): 835-844, 2022 Nov.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35925744

We examined how meaning in life was associated with working alliance (WA) and outcomes, all from the client perspective. Random intercept lagged cross-panel analyses were used to analyze data from intake and after every eight sessions for the first 24 sessions of open-ended individual psychodynamic psychotherapy from 94 clients nested within 12 therapists. We found that, for all four time periods, working alliance in one 8-week time period predicted both Meaning in Life Measure-Experience (MILM-E) and Meaning in Life Measure-Reflectivity (MILM-R) in the subsequent time period, and MILM-R in one 8-week time period predicted client outcome in the subsequent time period. These findings suggest that having a strong working alliance is associated with clients developing more meaning in life, and reflectivity about meaning in life is associated with clients improving in psychotherapy. Implications for practice and research are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic , Humans , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy
17.
J Couns Psychol ; 2022 Aug 08.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35939613

[Retraction notice: A retraction for this article was reported in Vol 70(4) of Journal of Counseling Psychology (see record 2023-89440-002). The following article (https://doi .org/10.1037/cou0000629) is being retracted. This retraction is at the request of coauthors Kivlighan and Hill after the results of an investigation by the University of Maryland Institutional Review Board (IRB). The IRB found that the study included data from between one and four therapy clients of the Maryland Psychotherapy Clinic and Research Laboratory (MPCRL) who either had not been asked to provide consent or had withdrawn consent for their data to be included in the research. An was not responsible for obtaining and verifying participant consent but agreed to the retraction of this article.] This study investigated within-client effects of session-to-session working alliance (WA) strength (mean of client's and therapists' ratings of Working Alliance Inventory [WAI] items for a session; WAI-M) and intra-individual variance of working alliance (WAI-IIV; variation in how the same individual responds to different items in the WAI for a session) of therapist and client on overall client functioning. Specifically, we explored how the strength and intra-individual variance for therapist and client working alliance at a previous session (Time t-1) would relate to overall client functioning at a current session (Time t). We also explored whether the effect of WA-M on overall client functioning would be different at different levels of WAI-IIV. The dynamic structural equation modeling (Asparouhov et al., 2018) was used to analyze longitudinal data from 4,489 sessions at a university clinic where 17 doctoral student therapists provided low-cost, open-ended, individual psychodynamic psychotherapy to 135 adult community clients. We found that client-rated WAI-M and WAI-IIV had positive within-client main effects on next-session client functioning when controlling for autoregressive effects. Findings on WAI-M by WAI-IIV interaction effects revealed that the relationship between WAI-M at a previous session and client functioning at a current session was significant only when WAI-IIV was low (i.e., high intra-individual consistency across WAI items). Therapists' WAI-M, WAI-IIV, and interaction of WAI-M and WAI-IIV did not predict the next session client functioning significantly. Limitations and implications of the present research are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

18.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 59(1): 74-83, 2022 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35025565

In this case study of an adult female client working with a doctoral student female therapist in 85 sessions of individual psychodynamic psychotherapy, we analyzed the antecedents, challenges, and consequences for 53 challenges in the intake and first five sessions, the middle three sessions, and the final three sessions. Within the context of a strong therapeutic relationship and when the client was balanced in being defended as well as open/reflective, the therapist's challenges that were of high quality (deep, clear, empathic, and moderately forceful) were associated with the client becoming more open/reflective. In contrast, when the client was defended (but not open/reflective), the therapist's challenges were of lower quality and were associated with the client becoming more defended and closed off. Thus, both the antecedent client state and the quality of the therapist challenges were associated with the consequences of challenges in terms of the client's response. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic , Adult , Empathy , Female , Humans , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy , Students
19.
Psychother Res ; 32(7): 936-950, 2022 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35086425

Objectives: Many clients do not return after intake. We speculated that similarities between therapists and clients in terms of interruptive behaviors would predict whether clients returned after intake (engaged).Methods: Trained judges coded therapist and client interruptive behaviors (interruptions, overlaps of speech, and sentence completions) for one engager (client returned for at least 10 sessions) and one non-engager (client did not return after intake) adult clients for each of 25 doctoral student therapists in individual psychodynamic psychotherapy.Results: Although all interruptive behaviors were infrequent, clients were most likely to return after intake (engage) when they interrupted at about the same amount as their therapists, overlapped less than their therapists, and completed sentences more than their therapists.Conclusions: Interruptions, sentence completions, and overlaps of speech are types of interruptive behavior that appear to have different relational consequences.


Psychotherapy, Psychodynamic , Adult , Humans , Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapy
20.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 59(1): 26-37, 2022 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34843318

We attempted a cross-cultural replication of Hill et al.'s (2017) consensual qualitative study of experienced Western therapists' perspectives on working with meaning in life (MIL) in psychotherapy. We thus interviewed 12 experienced Chinese therapists about their views on MIL, working with MIL in psychotherapy, and the meanings they derived from working as psychotherapists. Chinese participants typically defined MIL as involving freedom, responsibility, and valuing life and viewed MIL as underlying many clients' presenting concerns and thus playing a critical role in therapy. In terms of working with clients on MIL, therapists described specific intervention strategies (e.g., challenging clients to broaden their meaning) and related outcomes (e.g., enhanced motivation to change). They further indicated that for MIL work to be effective, therapists need to be competent for working with MIL and clients need to be aware of MIL issues and ready to work with them. Therapists also reported that they gained both personal and professional benefits from working with MIL in psychotherapy. A comparison with Hill et al. (2017) indicated some similarities (e.g., both viewed MIL as part of human existence and as underlying most client presenting concerns) and differences (e.g., Chinese therapists perceived MIL as involving a sense of responsibility to others whereas Western therapists did not mention this) between Chinese and Western therapists regarding MIL in psychotherapy. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Professional-Patient Relations , Psychotherapists , China , Humans , Psychotherapy , Qualitative Research
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