Therapist verification of patient self-concepts as a responsive precondition for early alliance development and subsequent introject change

Psychother Res. 2023 Dec 30:1-15. doi: 10.1080/10503307.2023.2297995. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: Social psychological research has indicated that people strive for self-consistent feedback and interactions, even if negative, to preserve the epistemic security of knowing themselves. Without such self-verification, any interpersonal exchange may become frustrated, anxiety-riddled, and at risk for deterioration. Thus, it may be important for therapists to meet patients' self-verification needs as a responsive precondition for early alliance establishment and development. We tested this hypothesis with patients receiving cognitive behavioral therapy for generalized anxiety disorder-a condition that may render one's self-verification needs especially strong. We also tested the hypothesis that better early alliance quality would relate to subsequent adaptive changes in and posttreatment level of patients' self-concepts.

Method: Eighty-four patients rated their self-concepts at baseline and across treatment and follow-up, their postsession recollection of their therapist's interpersonal behavior toward them during session 2, and their experience of alliance quality rated after sessions 3-6.

Results: As predicted, the more therapists verified at session 2 a patient's baseline self-concepts (which trended toward disaffiliative and overcontrolling, on average), the more positively that patient perceived their next-session alliance. Moreover, better session 3 alliance related to more adaptive affiliative and autonomy-granting self-concepts at posttreatment.

Conclusion: Results are discussed within a therapist responsiveness framework.

Keywords: cognitive behavioral therapy; generalized anxiety disorder; self-concept/introject change; self-verification; therapeutic alliance; therapist responsiveness.