Table of Contents
Abstract
The Body-Centred Countertransference Scale (BCCS) is a specialized psychometric tool developed by Jonathan Egan and Alan Carr in 2005. Its primary function is to quantify the frequency and intensity of bodily or somatic reactions experienced by therapists or health care professionals in response to their clients or patients during therapy sessions. The scale provides a structured means for professionals, particularly clinical psychologists, to monitor their unconscious physical responses, which are considered crucial indicators of the relational dynamics inherent in countertransference.
Keywords
Body-Centred Countertransference, BCCS, Countertransference, Somatic reactions, Therapist assessment, Clinical supervision, Psychotherapy research, Egan and Carr.
Authors
Jonathan Egan, Alan Carr
Purpose
The primary purpose of the BCCS is to systematize the assessment of the therapist’s physical experience during clinical practice. Traditional measures of countertransference often focus predominantly on emotional or cognitive responses. In contrast, the BCCS specifically targets the non-verbal, physical manifestations—such as muscle tension, dizziness, or stomach disturbance—that arise in the therapeutic dyad. This focus allows clinicians to gain insight into how client material is unconsciously processed through the therapist’s body.
By quantifying these physical responses over a specified period (typically the last six months), the scale serves as both a research tool and a clinical instrument for self-reflection and supervision. It facilitates empirical investigation into the relationship between specific client dynamics or disorders and corresponding physiological arousal or discomfort experienced by the professional.
Construct
The scale measures the construct of Body-Centred Countertransference (BCC). BCC is defined as the therapist’s unconscious, somatic, and physiological responses evoked by the client’s material, behavior, or underlying relational patterns. Within psychoanalytic and psychodynamic theory, the body is viewed as a crucial reservoir of unprocessed emotional information. The BCCS operationalizes this concept by listing 17 distinct physical reactions.
This construct suggests that the therapist’s body acts as a receptive instrument, mirroring or containing the client’s internal state, often before these feelings reach conscious awareness. Therefore, monitoring BCC is essential for maximizing therapeutic effectiveness and preventing burnout, as these somatic reactions can signal unresolved issues in the therapeutic relationship or parallel process phenomena.
Validity
While detailed reports on structural validity (e.g., confirmatory factor analysis) are typically found in the primary publication, preliminary data confirms the scale’s relevance to the intended domain. The BCCS has been shown to be highly correlated to other established measures of countertransference, suggesting strong convergent validity. This correlation indicates that the somatic responses captured by the BCCS align empirically with the broader, recognized emotional and cognitive components of the countertransference phenomenon.
Further validation studies, such as the 2010 study involving Irish clinical psychologists, demonstrate the ecological validity of the scale by showing that these physical reactions are common and identifiable occurrences in real-world clinical settings, thus confirming the scale’s ability to measure a clinically relevant experience.
Reliability
The internal consistency of the Body-Centred Countertransference Scale demonstrates acceptable reliability for a newly developed psychological measure. Initial psychometric testing yielded a Cronbach’s alpha of .71. This value suggests that the 17 items on the scale are moderately cohesive and measure a singular, underlying construct (Body-Centred Countertransference).
The acceptable alpha level indicates that practitioners can rely on the BCCS to consistently capture their range of somatic responses to clients. Future research may aim to refine the scale further to achieve higher alpha values, but the current reliability is sufficient for clinical research and reflective practice.
Factor Analysis
Specific details regarding the empirical factor structure (e.g., the number of underlying factors) derived from exploratory or confirmatory factor analysis were not explicitly provided in the summarized source material. However, the calculation of a single Cronbach’s alpha (.71) across all items strongly suggests that the scale is intended to function primarily as a unitary measure of overall body-centred countertransference experienced by the professional.
Researchers are encouraged to consult the original 2005 documentation by Egan and Carr to understand whether the authors identified any subscales corresponding to distinct types of somatic responses (e.g., anxiety-related symptoms, shutdown symptoms, or arousal symptoms) that might contribute to the overall BCC score.
Instrument
Test Type: Self-report measure / Clinical reflection tool
Format: 17 items rated on a 4-point frequency Likert-style scale (ranging from 0 = ‘This has never happened to me’ to 3 = ‘Yes, this has happened often’).
Language Available: English (Primary language of development).
Population Group: Therapists, Clinical psychologists, Counselors, and Health care professionals.
Age Group: Adult professionals.
Population Details: Originally validated on a sample of Irish clinical psychologists.
Test Methodology: Respondents are instructed to reflect on their bodily reactions experienced in the last six months during therapy sessions with clients or patients.
Keywords
Psychometric scale, Therapist self-report, Somatic mirroring, Countertransference assessment, Psychodynamic, Clinical supervision, Professional development, Egan.
Authors
Author ORCID Identifier: Not Available
Affiliation Email addresses: Not Available
Correspondence Address: Not Available
Permissions & Fee and Test Year
Test Year: 2005
Permissions and Fee: Information regarding current licensing fees or explicit permissions for non-academic use should be obtained directly from the authors, Jonathan Egan or Alan Carr, or by referencing the key publications.
Reference’s
The primary references for the Body-Centred Countertransference Scale include the original scale document and subsequent validation studies:
- Egan, J., Booth, A., & Trimble, T. (2010). Feeling it: body-centred countertransference in a sample of Irish clinical psychologists. Irish Psychologist. (Cited by 14).
- The original scale document by Egan and Carr (2005) can be accessed here: egan_and_carr_bct_2005 (DOC file).
- The study on clinical psychologists is available as a PDF here: booth_and_egan_2010_body_centred_countertransference_clinical_psychologists (PDF file).
Items of the Body-Centred Countertransference Scale
IMPORTANT: The following scale items must be preserved in their original language and must not be changed in any way.
Egan and Carr Body-centred Countertransference Scale (2005)
For each item in the scale, please place a tick in the box that applies to you. Remember that it is only bodily reactions that have happened to you
| 0 ‘This has never happened to me when in the last six months’ | 1 ‘Yes, this has happened to me at least once in the last six months, but not that often’ | 2 ‘Yes, this has happened a few times in the last six months’ | 3 ‘Yes, this has happened often in the last six months’ | |||||
| 1 | Muscle Tension | |||||||
| 2 | Sleepiness | |||||||
| 3 | Yawning | |||||||
| 4 | Tearfulness | |||||||
| 5 | Unexpectedly shifting your body | |||||||
| 6 | Headache | |||||||
| 7 | Stomach Disturbance | |||||||
| 8 | Throat Constriction | |||||||
| 9 | Raised Voice | |||||||
| 10 | Dizziness | |||||||
| 11 | Loss of Voice | |||||||
| 12 | Aches in Joints | |||||||
| 13 | Nausea | |||||||
| 14 | Numbness | |||||||
| 15 | Sexual Arousal | |||||||
| 16 | Genital Pain | |||||||
| 17 | Other, please specify | |||||||
Cite this article
Mohammed looti (2025). Body-Centered Countertransference Scale. Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Retrieved from https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/body-centred-countertransference-scale/
Mohammed looti. "Body-Centered Countertransference Scale." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 25 Oct. 2025, https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/body-centred-countertransference-scale/.
Mohammed looti. "Body-Centered Countertransference Scale." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 2025. https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/body-centred-countertransference-scale/.
Mohammed looti (2025) 'Body-Centered Countertransference Scale', Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Available at: https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/body-centred-countertransference-scale/.
[1] Mohammed looti, "Body-Centered Countertransference Scale," Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, vol. X, no. Y, ص Z-Z, October, 2025.
Mohammed looti. Body-Centered Countertransference Scale. Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. 2025;vol(issue):pages.