Working alliance and attachment orientations in the patient-oncologist relationship

Psychooncology. 2021 Aug;30(8):1375-1382. doi: 10.1002/pon.5693. Epub 2021 Apr 19.

Abstract

Objective: Accumulating research suggests that the working alliance (WA) is a key component in the patient-oncologist relationship. Attachment theory provides a useful framework for understanding this alliance within the oncological setting, where patients' attachment systems are often activated. This study examined the association between attachment orientations of both dyad members (i.e., patient and oncologist) and patients' WA experience. It also probed whether this link was mediated by patients' attachment-related attitudes towards the oncologist, using a recently developed measure.

Method: Oncologists and their respective patients (N = 113: 103 patients, 10 oncologists) were sampled at oncological clinics. Eligible patients filled out online measures of the WA, attachment-related attitudes, and attachment orientations. The later was also completed by oncologists.

Results: Structural equation modeling demonstrated that both patients' and oncologists' avoidant attachment orientation inversely predicted patients' WA experience, via patients' experience of feeling unsupported by their oncologists.

Conclusions: Findings suggest that attributes of both members of the patient-oncologist dyad are related to patients' WA experience, and that attachment-related attitudes towards oncologists occur within this relationship. Oncologists' understanding of patients' unique attachment behaviors, as well as their own such behaviors, could improve cancer patients' quality of care and illness outcomes. Results represent another step forward in fully exploring whether oncologists can serve as attachment figures for their patients.

Keywords: attachment; cancer; physician-patient relationship; psycho-oncology; working alliance.

MeSH terms

  • Emotions
  • Humans
  • Medical Oncology
  • Neoplasms*
  • Oncologists*
  • Physician-Patient Relations