Investigating the Relationship Between the Therapeutic Alliance and Treatment Outcome in Violent Offender Treatment By Elizabeth C. Ross A thesis submitted to the Victoria University of Wellington in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Psychology December 2008 The research studies in this thesis have been supported by the New Zealand Department of Corrections. 2 Declaration I hereby declare that this thesis has not been submitted, either in the same or different form, to this or any other university for a degree: Signature: _____________________________ 3 Publications Data and literature from this thesis have been reported in the following formats and been published or submitted for publication: Ross, E. C., Polaschek, D. L. L., & Ward, T. (2008). The Therapeutic Alliance: A theoretical revision for offender rehabilitation. Aggression and Violent Behavior, 13, 462-480. Ross, E. C., Polaschek, D. L. L., & Wilson, M. (2008). Shifting perspectives: A confirmatory factor analysis of the Working Alliance Inventory with high-risk violent offenders. Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, (under review). 4 Acknowledgements Writing a thesis is like riding a rollercoaster. There are dizzying highs, frightening lows, and at times you feel like your life has been turned upside down. And all this happens once every couple of minutes! There have been a lot of people in my life along for this ride, to whom I owe my eternal gratitude. Firstly, to my wonderful supervisors Devon Polaschek and Marc Wilson; I have been so lucky to have the benefit of your wisdom and experience. Devon: you were critical but gentle, encouraging but realistic, and you were always there to ground me when I threatened to get carried away by my ideas. Marc: you were always positive, always enthusiastic, always encouraging me to try new statistics on my own, but you never left me feeling unsupported. Together, you were the perfect supervisors, and I always left supervision feeling motivated and happy. Tony Ward: I also owe you gratitude for setting me on this path with my honours year project, which is now a published theory and a large part of this thesis. Secondly, I am deeply grateful to the staff and clients at the Rimutaka Violence Prevention Unit. Without all of you taking time out of your lives to fill in my endless forms, I would not have a thesis. To the therapists: thank you for allowing me in to what is usually a private and privileged relationship between a therapist and client. To the clients: thank you so much for participating in research that you may have found challenging and of little immediate benefit. To the supervisors: I know I added in more work to your already hectic lives. To the custodial and operational staff: thank you for accepting me as staff, and arranging things for me, even if you had no idea who I was. I also owe many 5 thanks to the Department of Corrections, for supporting this research and allowing me to access the evaluation data. To my friends and family — who have had to put up with me all this time being alternately wildly enthusiastic, despondent, and just plain crazy — thank you for not disowning me. Mum and Dad: I know how proud and supportive you are, mostly because you wouldn’t let me get married and become Mrs Robertshaw unless I was going to be Dr Ross. Caroline and Anna: you may not have always known exactly what I was studying and when, but you’ve always been there as my sisters and best friends. To Emily and Cat: I enjoyed our research debriefs over coffee or wine, it’s nice to know you’re not the only one obsessing about something no-one else knows about! To Bec, my lovely office mate: you have been a great source of help, information, and importantly gossip; and I know you will produce a fantastic thesis. To the clinical girls: you have been great company and classes with you were a welcome relief from endless data and statistics. Lastly, I owe huge thanks to my wonderful husband Kevin. It was you who got the brunt of my emotional rollercoaster ride, consoling me with hugs when it was all too hard, celebrating my achievements, and motivating me when I just couldn’t face writing another word. You have been so supportive of me so far, and never complained once, but I’m sure you’re glad the ride is almost over. I know I am. 6 Conventions Used in this Thesis Numbering Studies The four studies in this thesis are numbered independently from the chapters in which they appear. Numbering Tables and Figures All tables and figures are numbered according to the chapter in which they appear. They are numbered as figure or table x.y with x referring to the chapter and y referring to the order in which they appear in the chapter. Abbreviations Although all abbreviations are explained in the text, the following list are the common abbreviations used that may be helpful to refer to in reading this thesis: TA Therapeutic Alliance WAI Working Alliance Inventory RVPU Rimutaka Violence Prevention Unit CBT Cognitive Behavioural Therapy 7 Abstract The role of the therapeutic alliance (TA) has largely been ignored in the field of high-risk violent offender treatment. The focus on effective manualised treatment that reduces recidivism has led to improvements in treatment programme delivery, but at the cost of examining the therapy process. Considering previous research has consistently linked levels of alliance with treatment outcome in clinical and community treatment settings, it is imperative to investigate the role of the TA within high-risk violent offender treatment, because of the particularly challenging group that they represent. The aim of this thesis was to examine the relationship between the TA and treatment outcome, and the various factors that influence this relationship, within a violence prevention setting. To achieve this aim, a longitudinal study was conducted at the Rimutaka Violence Prevention Unit (RVPU) in Wellington, New Zealand, with a cohort of 70 men in treatment and their therapists, examining the TA, treatment outcome and associated variables over four time points throughout the eight month treatment programme. The results of this research are reported as four related studies. Study One explored the structure and patterns of the Working Alliance Inventory (WAI). Study One Part A was a Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the WAI, which tested the competing models of the factor structure of the WAI and explored whether rater perspective (client, therapist, observer) had an effect on the structure. It was found that a two-factor structure was the best fit for the WAI, and that all rater perspectives shared this structure. Study One Part B explored the pattern of the WAI over the four time periods of this study in order 8 to understand how the WAI changes over time, and whether this pattern differed by rater perspective. The results confirmed that changes in all rater perspectives showed a linearly increasing pattern of alliance over time. Study Two explored the client factors that affect the initial formation of the TA and examined whether these factors were specific to an “offender” or “general” client profile informed by previous research. Two client factors specific to an offender profile — motivation to change and criminal attitudes — were found to be significantly associated with the initial formation of the TA. Study Three examined the relationship between the TA and treatment outcome, and explored whether there were any factors that co-varied with or moderated this relationship. A small but significant association between alliance and outcome was found; however no significant co-varying or moderating factors were discovered. Lastly, Study Four drew together the data from Study Two and Study Three and tested whether these results fit the Revised Theory of the Therapeutic Alliance (RTTA) model (Ross, Polaschek, & Ward, 2008), or other models previously reported in the literature. Several significant models were found that partly supported the RTTA. The best of these models incorporated client motivation to change, TA and treatment outcome as measured by change in risk of violent reoffending. Overall, the results of this study support the importance of the TA and client motivation to change in violent offender treatment. The implications for these results and the clinical applications are discussed, limitations are outlined, and directions for future research are suggested. 9 Contents Declaration 2 Publications 3 Acknowledgments 4 Conventions Used in this Thesis 6 Abstract 7 Contents 9 List of Tables 17 List of Figures 20 Chapter One: The Therapeutic Alliance 22 Introduction 22 Process vs. content: The importance of process issues in 23 psychotherapy The therapeutic alliance concept: Historical roots of the therapeutic 24 alliance Defining the therapeutic alliance 26 The role of the therapeutic alliance in CBT 27 Chapter Two: Violence and Violence Prevention 31 Violence in New Zealand: Prevalence and proportions 31 Why should we care? The human and economic costs of violence 32 1 0 The global emergence of violence prevention programmes 32 The Rimutaka Violence Prevention Unit (RVPU) 34 Evaluating the RVPU 35 The role of the therapeutic alliance in violence prevention 36 programmes A neglected area of research 36 Current research 37 Chapter Three: Current Research on Factors That Can Affect the 39 Therapeutic Alliance Client factors that could affect the therapeutic alliance 39 Therapist factors that could affect the therapeutic alliance 41 Interactional factors that could affect the therapeutic alliance 45 Setting factors that could affect the therapeutic alliance 47 System factors 48 Role conflict and confusion 51 Programme factors 53 Group treatment settings 55 Immediate therapy environment 58 Chapter Four: A Proposed Model of the Therapeutic Alliance in 62 Offender Rehabilitation Chapter Five: The Relationship Between Therapeutic Alliance and 73 Treatment Outcome
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