Measures of the therapeutic relationship in severe psychotic illness: a comparison of two scales.
Bale, Rob;
Catty, Jocelyn;
Watt, Hilary;
Greenwood, Nan;
Burns, Tom;
(2006)
Measures of the therapeutic relationship in severe psychotic illness: a comparison of two scales.
The International journal of social psychiatry, 52 (3).
pp. 256-266.
ISSN 0020-7640
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0020764006067195
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BACKGROUND: A durable therapeutic relationship is central to mental health practice. The Working Alliance Inventory (WAI) and the Helping Alliance Questionnaire (HAQ) are established instruments for measuring such a relationship. AIMS: The project aimed to test the correlation between the two scales for patients with severe psychotic illness treated in an Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) team. METHODS: Ninety-one patients of an ACT team and their key-workers were recruited to complete the measures. RESULTS: Seventy-one patients (78%) completed the scales, and key-workers completed scales for every eligible patient. Both groups rated the relationship positively. There was a strong and significant correlation between the patient version of the WAI and the HAQ. There were significant but much weaker correlations between the patient-rated WAI and HAQ and the key-worker WAI. CONCLUSION: The patient version of the WAI and the HAQ seem to measure the patient's view of the relationship equivalently. The HAQ is simpler and easier to administer than the WAI.