Making Cross-Racial Therapy Work: A Phenomenological Study of Clients' Experiences of Cross-Racial Therapy

被引:101
作者
Chang, Doris F. [1 ]
Berk, Alexandra [1 ]
机构
[1] New Sch Social Res, Dept Psychol, New York, NY 10011 USA
关键词
racial/ethnic matching; psychotherapy; therapeutic alliance; phenomenology; MULTICULTURAL COUNSELING COMPETENCE; AFRICAN-AMERICAN CLIENTS; ALLIANCE RUPTURES; MINORITY CLIENTS; CULTURAL-VALUES; RACE; PSYCHOTHERAPY; CONSEQUENCES; PERSPECTIVES; ORIENTATION;
D O I
10.1037/a0016905
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
A phenomenological and consensual qualitative study of clients' lived experiences of cross-racial therapy was conducted to enhance the understanding of whether, how, and under what conditions race matters in the therapy relationship. The sample consisted of 16 racial and/or ethnic minority clients who received treatment from 16 White, European American therapists across a range of treatment settings. Participants who reported a satisfying experience of cross-racial therapy (n = 8) were examined in relation to gender-matched controls and, in most cases, race/ethnicity-matched controls (n = 8) who reported an overall unsatisfying experience. Therapy satisfaction was assessed during the screening process and was confirmed during the research interview. Therapy narratives were analyzed with consensual qualitative research to identify client, therapist, and relational factors that distinguished satisfied participants from unsatisfied participants. Findings reveal substantial differences at the level of individual characteristics and relational processes, providing evidence of both universal (etic) as well as culture-or context-specific (emic) aspects of healing relationships. Recommendations for facilitating positive alliance formation in cross-racial therapy are provided, based on clients' descriptions of facilitative conditions in the therapy relationship.
引用
收藏
页码:521 / 536
页数:16
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