Title

How Clients of Marriage and Family Therapists Make Decisions About Therapy Discontinuation and Persistence

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

5-3-2018

Publication Title

Contemporary Family Therapy

First page number:

1

Last page number:

11

Abstract

In the marriage and family therapy (MFT) field, minimal attention has been given to in-session therapy processes that influence clients’ decisions to persist in therapy or prematurely discontinue therapy. To prevent premature discontinuation, therapists need a better understanding of why clients leave treatment before completing it. In this grounded theory study, we interviewed 19 clients of MFTs to examine how they made decisions about therapy persistence or discontinuation. Factors that impacted participants’ decision to discontinue therapy were: client motivation, the therapeutic alliance, therapy productiveness, including the therapist’s understanding of the problem, the therapist’s frame of the problem, therapy pacing, and neutrality in relational therapy. Results support the importance of common factors in facilitating therapeutic change.

Keywords

Common factors; Premature discontinuation; Therapy processes

Disciplines

Marriage and Family Therapy and Counseling

Language

English

UNLV article access

Search your library

Share

COinS