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Family Psychology

Family Psychology. Family Psychology Specialty Council 2012. What is Family Psychology.

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Family Psychology

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  1. Family Psychology • Family Psychology Specialty Council • 2012

  2. What is Family Psychology • Family Psychology is a specialty in professional psychology that is focused on the emotions, thoughts, and behavior of individuals, couples, and families in relationships and in the broader environment in which they function. • It is a specialty founded on principles of systems theory, with the family as a system being of most central focus. • Family Psychology has a rich research and practice tradition • Within this framework family therapists might study and practice with: • Individuals • Couples • Families • Work groups • Community groups of all kinds • Organized systems

  3. Major focus • It is not so much that family psychologists treat different populations or even that a family psychologist’s clients present with vastly different problems. • Rather, it is the way in which family psychologist’s think and work that differentiates him or her from the more traditionally trained professional psychologist. • The family psychologist is trained to approach client issues from systemic and multisystemic perspectives. • This perspective provides a vastly different conceptual model from which to view the complex presenting issues of families and their constituent members. • Whether the client is a family, a couple, or a single member of a family, the family psychologist approaches both research and practice from a systemic perspective

  4. History • Family Psychology has its roots in the early child welfare and social work movements of the early 1900’s • The unique nature of Family Psychology emerged in the 1960’s with the emergence of “systems thinking” • The early systems thinkers were mathematicians, economists, engineers, and communication theorists • The first generation of Family Psychology theoretically based practices were built on systems thinking and come about in the middle 1960’s • Evidence-based Family Psychology emerged from the extensive research on effective practices beginning in the 1980’s until the present

  5. Scope • Family Psychologists work with individuals, couples, families and broader social systems. Regardless of the client, the Family Psychologist conceptualizes treatment from an interpersonal, systems perspective. • Family Psychology researchers study family dynamics, couple dynamics, relationship patterns and effective practices • Family Psychology intervention have been found to be effective with: • Youth behavior problems • Couple and family communication issues • Couple relational distress • Substance use and abuse (in couples, families and with youth) • Managing mental illness by reducing hospitalizations and relapse • Schooling problems of youngsters • Behavioral problems of children or adolescents • Parenting problems

  6. Main Theories • Traditional/Historical Approaches • Structural Family Therapy • Strategic Family Therapy • Multigenerational Family Therapy • McMaster Model Evidence Based Family Interventions • Functional Family Therapy • Multisystemic Family Therapy • Emotionally Focused Couple Therapy • Multidimensional Family Therapy • Cognitive Family/Couple Therapy • Behavioral Couple Therapy

  7. Typical Techniques • Evidence based Treatments • Systems interventions (including family therapy) from a wide array of emphases • Network therapy • Couples therapy • Group therapy and work group therapy • Consultation with external authorities such as school professionals, primary and chronic care physicians, juvenile authorities and the courts

  8. Sub-Areas • Family Therapy • Couple Therapy • Parent Education • Divorce Mediation • Sex Therapy • Organizational Consultation • Forensic Parenting and Child Evaluations

  9. The effectiveness of Family Psychology • Family Psychology has a 50 year tradition of research focusing on: • The effectiveness of family psychology intervention • The patterns and processes of family and couple functioning • Family Psychology has repeatedly been found to be as or more effective than alternative approaches for a wide range of psychological problems

  10. Current Issues • How to effectively implement Family and Couple based treatment in community settings • Identifying adaptation for cultural and ethnic diversity • Integrating Family Psychology into Primary Care settings • Primary training in Couple and Family Psychology in graduate and undergraduate training • Using Family Psychology intervention methods to work with major mental illness

  11. Resources • Books: • Sexton, T. L., Weeks, G., Robbins, M. (2003). Handbook of Family Therapy. New York: Routledge. • Fonagy, P. Taret, M, Cottrell, D, Phillips, J, and Kurtz, Z. (2002). What works for whom? A critical review of treatments for children and adolescents. New York: Guilford Press. • Kazdin, A. E. and Weisz, J.R. Evidence-based psychotherapies for children and adolescents. (2003). New York: Guilford Press • Bray, J.H. and Stanton, M. (2009). The Wiley-Blackwell Handbook of Family Psychology. New York: Wiley-Blackwell • Journals: • Journal of Family Psychology • Family and Couple Research and Practice • Journal of Marital and Family Therapy • Journal of Family Therapy

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