Regular article
Program, counselor, and patient variability in the alliance: A multilevel study of the alliance in relation to substance use outcomes

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsat.2011.01.003Get rights and content

Abstract

We explored patient, therapist, and program variability in the alliance in relation to drug and alcohol use during treatment, and whether alliance mediates the relation of program characteristics to drug/alcohol use. Data (N = 1,613 patients) were drawn from a randomized clinical trial investigating the efficacy of an intervention that provided alliance and outcome feedback to 112 counselors across 20 community-based outpatient substance abuse treatment clinics in the northeast United States. Program characteristics were measured using the Organization Readiness for Change scale. Using multilevel modeling, we found that alliance was related to both drug and alcohol use during the past week at the patient and program levels of analysis, but not the counselor level. Several program characteristics were related to average drug and alcohol use. The alliance was not a mediator of these relationships. Program variability in the alliance is important to the alliance–outcome relationship in the treatment of substance abuse. Better outcomes can be achieved by improving both organizational functioning and the patient–counselor alliance.

Keywords

Substance abuse
Alliance
Program
Counselor

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