Bj. Liddle, THERAPIST SEXUAL ORIENTATION, GENDER, AND COUNSELING PRACTICES AS THEY RELATE TO RATINGS OF HELPFULNESS BY GAY AND LESBIAN CLIENTS, Journal of counseling psychology, 43(4), 1996, pp. 394-401
Three hundred ninety-two lesbian and gay volunteers described their ex
periences with 923 therapists, reporting therapist sexual orientation,
therapist gender, and perceived helpfulness of the therapist in each
case. Gay, lesbian, and bisexual therapists of both genders and hetero
sexual female therapists were all rated more helpful than heterosexual
male therapists. Participants also reported whether each therapist ex
hibited 9 negative and 4 positive practices. Relative risk ratios indi
cated that 8 of the 9 negative therapist practices were significantly
associated with (a) client designation of a therapist as unhelpful and
(b) termination after 1 session. All 4 of the positive practices were
inversely associated both with unhelpful ratings and with termination
after 1 session. Therapist practices accounted for more of the varian
ce in ratings of helpfulness than did therapist demographic characteri
stics.