@article {Hunikbjgpopen20X101131, author = {Liesbeth Hunik and Shelley Galvin and Tim olde Hartman and Elizabeth Rieger and Peter Lucassen and Kirsty Douglas and Pauline Boeckxstaens and Elizabeth Sturgiss}, title = {Exploring the psychometric properties of the Working Alliance Inventory in general practice: a cross-sectional study}, elocation-id = {bjgpopen20X101131}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.3399/bjgpopen20X101131}, publisher = {Royal College of General Practitioners}, abstract = {Background The therapeutic alliance is a framework from psychology that describes three components: goals, tasks, and bond. The Working Alliance Inventory adapted for general practice (WAI-GP) measures the strength of the therapeutic alliance between the patient and the clinician, and it could be useful in both research and clinical settings.Aim To determine if the patient score on WAI-GP can delineate the three components (goals, tasks, and bond), and to test concurrent validity with the Consultation and Relational Empathy (CARE) measure and the Patient Perception of Patient-Centredness (PPPC) measure.Design \& setting A cross-sectional study took place in 12 general practice waiting rooms in Australia.Method The research instruments included the 12-item WAI-GP (the patient version), the CARE and PPPC measures, plus a survey of demographics and reason for consultation. To perform a principal components factor analysis of the WAI-GP, this dataset was combined with an existing dataset. The Spearman rank correlation was used to determine concurrent validity between the WAI-GP and the CARE and PPPC measures.Results Participants (97{\textendash}99\%) reported a strong positive alliance after the consultation (average WAI-GP mean 4.27 {\textpm} 0.67 out of 5, n = 146). Factor analysis could not separate the three components (one factor, eigenvalue \>1; Cronbach{\textquoteright}s α = 0.957; n = 281). Concurrent validity was supported by moderate correlations with the other measures (PPPC ρ = {\textendash}0.51, P\<0.005, CARE ρ = 0.56, P\<0.005).Conclusion Three components could not be identified, but the WAI-GP has a high internal consistency and concurrent validity with moderate correlations with the CARE and PPPC. A more diverse sample may better distinguish the three components leading to more specific feedback to clinicians on their consultation practices.}, URL = {https://bjgpopen.org/content/early/2020/12/14/bjgpopen20X101131}, eprint = {https://bjgpopen.org/content/early/2020/12/14/bjgpopen20X101131.full.pdf}, journal = {BJGP Open} }