Treatment Network Typologies and the Working Alliance of Clients with Serious Mental Illness

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Abstract

The climate and culture of treatment for clients with serious mental illness (SMI) are complex. In this study, we aim to cultivate a deeper understanding of the treatment environment using a network typological approach to measure the local treatment context and assess its implications on the perceived quality of clients’ relationships with their care providers. We use in-depth egocentric network data from clients with SMI in community mental health centers and state psychiatric hospitals from the Indiana Mental Health Services and HIV Risk Study (N = 417). Clustering analysis identifies five unique and distinct network types: supportive, sparse, diverse, clinical, and treatment-focused. Weighted least squares regressions reveal clients in networks with high amounts of support predict a more trusting working alliance, whereas care-oriented networks predict a less trusting alliance. Our findings underscore the need to consider the local network context in studies of the quality of care provided to people with SMI.

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APA

Usmanov, G. S., Wright, E. R., & Anderson, R. K. (2022). Treatment Network Typologies and the Working Alliance of Clients with Serious Mental Illness. Society and Mental Health, 12(1), 17–31. https://doi.org/10.1177/21568693211001432

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