33 research outputs found
Rare differential diagnosis of predominantly occipital infarcts and changes in the subcortical white matter
The Kentucky Homeplace Project: Family Health Care Advisers in Underserved Rural Communities
A Pilot retrospective analysis of alpha-blockers on recurrence in men with localised prostate cancer treated with radiotherapy
School-Based Suicide Risk Assessment: Standardization, Comprehensiveness, and Follow-up Procedures in Colorado
Embodying Industrialization: Inequality, Structural Violence, Disease, and Stress in Working-Class and Poor British Women
We Shall Overcome: The Association Between Family of Origin Adversity, Coming to Terms, and Relationship Quality in African Americans
Supervisory alliance: Key to positive alliances and outcomes in home-based parenting support?
Objectives: This study investigated whether the supervisory alliance between professionals and supervisors contributes to strong client-professional alliances and positive outcomes of home-based parenting support provided by youth care organizations. Methods: Multi-informant self-report supervisory alliance, alliance, and outcome data from 124 parents (M age = 39.83 years, SD = 6.98), professionals (n = 84, M age = 43.66 years, SD = 10.46), and supervisors (n = 26, M age = 47.18 years, SD = 8.28) collected early and late in care were analyzed using structural equation modeling. Results: A stronger professional-reported supervisory alliance was related to a stronger professional-reported alliance early in care (beta = 0.27, p < 0.01), and predicted higher levels of parent-reported satisfaction with care (beta = 0.19, p < .05; beta = 0.25, p < 0.01), and professional-reported satisfaction with care (beta = 0.21, p < 0.01). A stronger supervisory alliance reported by supervisors predicted parent-reported improvement in parent functioning (beta = 0.26, p < 0.05), and higher levels of professional-reported satisfaction with care (beta = 0.19, p < 0.05; beta = .14, p < 0.05). Finally, effects of professional-reported supervisory alliance on professional-reported satisfaction with care were mediated through higher levels of professional-reported alliance (beta = 0.06, p < 0.05; beta = .07, p < 0.05). Conclusions: A strong supervisory alliance may relate to strong alliances and positive outcomes of home-based parenting support. Future research needs to identify factors that contribute to strong supervisory alliances and explain linkages between the supervisory alliance, the alliance, and outcomes
