AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how problem severity and race/ethnicity influence therapist adherence and the emotional bond between families and therapists during Multisystemic Therapy (MST).
  • Data was analyzed from 185 adolescents and their caregivers, revealing differing patterns in therapist adherence and emotional bonding based on youth's race/ethnicity and behavioral issues.
  • Findings indicate that Caucasian youth with lower delinquency report better therapist adherence, while Hispanic/Latino caregivers with higher problem severity report lower adherence; interestingly, African-American youth with higher behavioral issues tend to report stronger emotional bonds with their therapists.

Article Abstract

This study examined the interaction between problem severity and race\ethnicity as a predictor of therapist adherence and family-therapist emotional bond. Data for this study came from a longitudinal evaluation of Multisystemic Therapy (MST) provided by licensed MST provider organizations in community settings. Outcome variables included mid-treatment levels of caregiver report of therapist adherence, changes in caregiver report of therapist adherence over the course of treatment, and overall levels of caregiver-therapist and youth-therapist emotional bond. Hypothesized predictors included race\ethnicity and levels of poly-substance use, externalizing behavior, and youth self-report of delinquency early in treatment as well as pre-treatment number of arrests. Participants were 185 adolescents ( age = 15.35, = 1.29) and their caregivers. Of the participating youth, 48 % self-identified as Caucasian, 20 % as African-American, 28 % as Hispanic\Latino, and 4 % as "other." Two-level Hierarchical Linear Modeling analyses revealed that for Caucasian youth, lower rates of self-reported delinquency were associated with greater increases in caregiver report of therapist adherence over the course of MST. For His-panic\Latino caregivers, higher externalizing behavior and poly-substance use were associated with reports of lower therapist adherence at mid-treatment and poorer overall levels of emotional bonding with therapists. In contrast, for African-American participants, higher levels of youth externalizing behavior and poly-substance use were associated with higher overall levels of caregiver and youth report of emotional bonding with therapists, respectively. Results provide evidence that race\ethnicity interacts with problem severity in predicting therapist adherence and family-therapist emotional bond within real-world practice settings and suggest possible therapeutic process differences across race.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4452203PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10826-012-9638-5DOI Listing

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