The current study intends to investigate whether the therapeutic process is impeded by stigma and how stigma develops over the course of cognitive behavioural psychotherapy treatment. Sixty German psychotherapy inpatients were asked on a weekly basis about two facets of stigma: self-stigma and perceived public stigma. That information was linked to additional process as well as outcome variables (therapeutic engagement, working alliance, depressive, and general psychological symptoms). Both facets of stigma decreased over the course of psychotherapy, but only the decrease in self-stigma was significant. In a weekly interval, low (high) self-stigma predicted high (low) levels of working alliance and therapeutic engagement and vice versa. The current study shows that self-stigma is especially subject to change during the course of an inpatient psychotherapeutic treatment. In addition, our results point to the interrelation between self-stigma and other process variables contributing to the effectiveness and success of psychotherapy.
Keywords: cognitive behavioural psychotherapy; inpatients; side effects; therapeutic engagement; working alliance.
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