Objective: To investigate the therapeutic relationship and how it is influenced by sociodemographic and clinical factors.
Method: This study analysed self-ratings of the therapeutic relationship in 90 first-admitted, 72 long-term hospitalised and 41 out-patients with schizophrenia along with 249 alcoholic and 42 depressive in-patients and their association with sociodemographic and clinical variables. In all the patients, the therapeutic relationship was assessed using a simple scale based on three items.
Results: The therapeutic relationship differed significantly across groups. It was rated most positively by alcoholic patients and least positively by long-term hospitalised schizophrenia patients. Increased observer-rated psychopathology was significantly associated with a poorer therapeutic relationship in all groups except the hospitalised schizophrenia patients. In this group, increased self-rated symptoms were associated with a poorer relationship. In multiple regression analyses, 3-28% of the relationship variance was explained by psychopathology. CONCLUSIONS; Patient ratings of the therapeutic relationship were partially explained by psychopathology, leaving the greater part of the variance to be explained by factors other than sociodemographic and clinical characteristics.