Advancing the understanding of factors that influence client preferences for race and gender matching in psychotherapy

Although clients sometimes prefer having a counselor of their same race or gender, research generally does not show that racial/gender matching improves outcomes. Two studies explored matching preferences as a function of being informed (or not) about the lack of evidence for its efficacy, and the r...

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Veröffentlicht in:Counselling psychology quarterly 2022-07, Vol.35 (3), p.694-717
Hauptverfasser: Ilagan, Gabrielle S., Heatherington, Laurie
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container_title Counselling psychology quarterly
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description Although clients sometimes prefer having a counselor of their same race or gender, research generally does not show that racial/gender matching improves outcomes. Two studies explored matching preferences as a function of being informed (or not) about the lack of evidence for its efficacy, and the role of two individual difference variables, systemizing and strength of cultural identification. Studies 1 (n = 129) and 2 (n = 172) investigated preferences for racial and gender matching, respectively. Participants were randomly assigned to be "Informed" that research shows matching does not lead to superior outcomes, or "Uninformed." Using a discounting paradigm, they indicated their preference between more effective, unmatched therapy, or less effective, matched therapy; then between unmatched in-person therapy or matched teletherapy. Across studies, being informed did not affect preferences, and participants preferred unmatched in-person treatment to matched teletherapy. Lower systemizing and stronger identification with a culture other than White/European American were associated with stronger race/gender matching preferences. Black/African American participants had higher racial matching preferences compared to others, and Asian/Asian American participants (largely male) had higher gender matching preferences. This suggests clients may disregard information about the effectiveness of race/gender matching on outcomes, and they value in-person treatment over teletherapy.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Education Source
subjects African Americans
Asian Americans
Client preferences
Discounting
Efficacy
Gender
gender matching
Individual differences
Matching
Preferences
Psychotherapy
Race
race matching
Same race
teletherapy
title Advancing the understanding of factors that influence client preferences for race and gender matching in psychotherapy
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