Treatment alliance and needs of care concerning religiousness and spirituality: A follow-up study among psychiatric inpatients

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Abstract

Background: Patient satisfaction with religious/spiritual (R/S) care during mental health treatment has been associated with a better treatment alliance. Aims: To investigate the longitudinal relations between (un)met R/S care needs and treatment alliance/compliance over a 6-month period. Method: 201 patients in a Christian (CC) and a secular mental health clinic completed a questionnaire (T0) containing an R/S care needs questionnaire, the Working Alliance Inventory (WAI) and the Service Engagement Scale (SES). After 6 months 136 of them took part in a follow-up (T1). Associations were analysed using hybrid linear mixed models and structural equation modelling. Results: R/S care needs decreased over time, but a similar percentage remained unanswered (e.g. 67% of the needs on R/S conversations in a secular setting). Over a 6-month period, met R/S care needs were associated with a higher WAI score (β =.25; p

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van Nieuw Amerongen-Meeuse, J. C., Braam, A. W., Anbeek, C., Twisk, J. W. R., & Schaap-Jonker, H. (2022). Treatment alliance and needs of care concerning religiousness and spirituality: A follow-up study among psychiatric inpatients. International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 68(7), 1341–1350. https://doi.org/10.1177/00207640211023065

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