Our findings generate hypotheses on how participatory research into mental health issues can be fruitfully organized, in a way that empowers service users to active and constructive participation.
The aim of this study was to explore how adolescents in ongoing psychotherapies prefer their therapists to interact with them when they are establishing a therapeutic bond. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were held with 14 patients. A hermeneutic-phenomenological approach was used to analyze interview transcripts. The participants' descriptions of important experiential dimensions in their interaction with their therapists clustered around five themes: the adolescents (1) feeling vulnerable and ambivalent in relationship with a potential helper when therapy started; the therapists (2) showed them that they were comfortable with being a therapist (3), strengthened their autonomy by establishing therapeutic boundaries, (4) showed that they recognized patients' individuality by respecting their personal boundaries, (5) helped them make their experiences understandable and meaningful, and (6) allowed mutuality and emotional closeness.
In what should increase our confidence toward core aspects of ROM, we suggest that an integration of relational feedback concepts and stringent clinical dimension tracking into the ROM/CFS can be beneficial.
Aim
A startling number of adolescents have mental health problems, yet research on the effect of routine care shows sobering effect sizes and high dropout rates. This study's objective was to gain in‐depth, first‐person knowledge about what adolescents need from their therapists to engage therapeutically and benefit from treatment.
Method
A total of 22 adolescents aged 14–19 years participated in qualitative focus groups or individual interviews of their own choosing. The data material was analysed using a systematic, step‐wise and consensual qualitative research framework for team‐based analysis.
Findings
Six themes emerged from the analysis, named from the words of the adolescent participants: (1) facing a scary situation: Attend to the adolescent's starting point, (2) be warm, invested and emotionally engaged, (3) offer live company and presence as a real human being, (4) have integrity as an adult and a professional, (5) know the world of a teenager and get into their stories and (6) have mutuality as a virtue and treat the adolescent as an equal.
Discussion and implications
Overall, adolescents regard the quality of the therapeutic relationship with their therapist as essential for the success of psychotherapy. In terms of their needs in treatment, therapists need to overcome the adolescents’ initial misgivings and scepticism towards therapy through establishing trust and accommodating their developmental desire for autonomy and connectedness.
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