In any psychotherapy process monitoring outcomes and session quality is very important as it informs the therapist about the commitment of patient/client into the therapy. Compliance of patient generally depends on therapeutic skills of therapist such as rapport building, active listening etc. All the issue that may hinder therapeutic process and their regularity in session should be discussed in beginning it is really useful.
According to me outcome and quality of sessions of psychotherapy process are two different sides of a coin. As without one another cannot exist good quality sessions ensures desirable outcomes or vice versa. Outcome and quality of session can be assessed by analysing home assignment that we give in CBT, by making them to fill evaluation sheet either in beginning or in end of the sessions or by making them to answer other set pattern of questions about the problem they come across in this week and how they have handled it. Therapist should also keep check on body language and facial expressions as these may give crucial information about quality of session and their level of satisfaction from the sessions.
Thank you for your contribution. I aggree with you. Because Safran, Muran, and Eubanks-Carter (2011) have found alliance ruptures in a meta-analysis that in 19-42% of the meetings in psychotherapy. This is why alliance rupture-repair processes, (RRPs) are positively correlated with the clinical outcome (r = .24, p
As an au pair ages ago in Swabia we used Grüß Gott. I had to look it up now Grüß Gott (German pronunciation: literally '(may) God greet (you)') is a greeting, less often a farewell, in the Upper German Sprachraum especially in Switzerland, Bavaria, Franconia, Swabia, Austria and South Tyrol. Try to keep up with german by TV and notise that in Austria griaß di and griaß eich are commonly heard also Servus and Moin is used also in your beautiful country.