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Improving Patient Engagement in Couples Therapy: 5 Evidence-Based Levers

In couples work you are often engaging two people at once, and their participation tends to depend on each other.

A couple sits in your waiting room. One of them booked the appointment, read the intake email twice, and arrived early. The other came because their partner asked, and would rather be somewhere else. Sometimes only one partner comes at all. The session has not started, and the two people in front of you may already show very different levels of patient engagement. In couples therapy that gap tends to be the norm rather than the exception, and you will often feel it in everything that follows. The encouraging part is that engagement is rarely a fixed trait. It is something a practice can usually build, measure, and lift with a few deliberate levers.

What does patient engagement mean in a couples therapy practice?

Healthcare researchers tend to define patient engagement as the active, collaborative partnership between a provider and a patient working toward better outcomes (Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality; NEJM Catalyst). In a couples practice the definition stretches. You may be working with two people whose participation depends on each other, plus the relationship itself as a kind of third client. Engagement here can look like both partners completing assessments, returning for sessions, and doing the work you assign between visits.

Why is patient engagement lower in couples therapy than in individual care?

NEJM Catalyst’s Patient Engagement Capacity Model suggests engagement may depend less on willpower than on capacity, the understanding and resources a patient brings to the work. In couples therapy that capacity is often doubled and relational. One partner may arrive ready while the other feels dragged in, and a single reluctant partner can stall much of the course of therapy. Lower engagement in couples work is rarely about effort. It tends to be about two capacities that have to align.

How does the Gottman Relationship Checkup increase patient engagement?

Before the first session, the Gottman Relationship Checkup can give each partner a validated assessment across friendship, intimacy, conflict, values, and trust. You may walk in with a scored roadmap of the couple’s strengths and challenges, so the opening session can move toward intervention rather than intake. Couples tend to engage more when they can see their own data, and a free reassessment generates a Delta report, so partners can follow their progress over time. NEJM Catalyst’s work on onboarding points a similar way: engaging patients before the encounter may raise participation later.

What patient engagement metrics should every therapist track?

It is hard to lift what you do not measure. A few patient engagement metrics may be worth watching in a couples practice: assessment completion by both partners rather than one, reassessment movement on the Delta report, attendance and no-show rates across the course of therapy, and between-session activity such as whether couples open the exercises you assign. Tracking each partner separately tends to matter, because an average can hide one disengaged person.

Five practical patient engagement levers you can use this week

  1. Send the assessment before session one. The Relationship Checkup can let both partners participate before they reach your office, so the first session may start with data instead of intake.
  2. Show couples their progress. Use the reassessment and its Delta report so partners can see what has changed, which tends to keep them invested.
  3. Assign work between sessions. The Gottman Relationship Builder gives couples exercises and videos to complete on their own time, and the session may open up for deeper work.
  4. Engage the reluctant partner first. Plan your first contact and early questions for the partner who did not book the appointment, and give each person a clear role.
  5. Take friction off the clinical hour. When your practice tools handle scheduling and documentation, more of the session can go to the relationship.

Patient engagement in couples therapy is rarely a single intervention. It tends to be a set of habits a practice can build, and training in the Gottman Method (Levels 1, 2, and 3) can deepen the toolkit for the hardest cases. You might start with one lever this week and measure what changes.

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