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Anger Management for Substance Abuse and Mental Health Clients. Andrew Berger, PhD Mental Health Specialist, San Francisco and Dallas Regions Janet Negley, PhD Center Mental Health Consultant, San Jose Job Corps Center. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EE43duUeywY&feature=related.
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Anger Management for Substance Abuse and Mental Health Clients Andrew Berger, PhD Mental Health Specialist, San Francisco and Dallas Regions Janet Negley, PhD Center Mental Health Consultant, San Jose Job Corps Center
What Is Anger? • Anger vs. Aggression • Anger vs. Hostility • When anger becomes a problem?
SAMHSA Model • For use by qualified mental health and substance abuse clinicians • 12-week cognitive behavioral model • 90-minute weekly group therapy meetings
Anger Management Participant Workbook • SAMHSA website • Core concepts • Worksheets • Homework assignments • Notes for each session
Anger Management Manual • Effectiveness • Diversity of populations
Group Rules • Group safety • Confidentiality • Homework assignments • Absences and cancellations • Timeouts
Myths About Anger • Anger is inherited • Anger automatically leads to aggression • You must be aggressive to get what you want • Venting anger is always desirable
Anger Meter A simple way to monitor your anger is to use a 1 to 10 scale called the anger meter. A score of 1 on the anger meter represents a complete lack of anger or a total state of calm, whereas 10 represents an angry and explosive loss of control that leads to negative consequences.
Events That Trigger Anger • When you get angry, it is because you have encountered an event in your life that has provoked your anger • Many times, specific events touch on sensitive areas • These sensitive areas or “red flags” usually refer to long-standing issues that can easily lead to anger
Cues To Anger • A second important way to monitor anger is to identify the cues that occur in response to the anger-provoking event • These cues serve as warning signs that you have become angry and that your anger is escalating • Cues can be broken down into four cue categories: physical, behavioral, emotional, and cognitive (or thought) cues
Weekly Check In Procedure To Monitor Anger • What was the highest number you reached on the anger meter during the past week? • What was the event that triggered your anger? • What cues were associated with the anger-provoking event? • What strategies did you use to avoid reaching a 10 on the anger meter?
Anger Control Plans • Immediate strategies • Preventative strategies
The Aggression Cycle • Escalation • Explosion • Post-explosion
Cognitive Restructuring (ABCD) Model • Activating event • Beliefs about the event • Emotional consequences • Dispute
Responding To Anger • Assertiveness • Aggressiveness • Passivity
Conflict Resolution Model • Identifying the problem • Identifying the feelings • Identifying the specific impact • Deciding whether to resolve the conflict • Addressing and resolving the conflict
Anger and The Family and Culture • For many of us, the interactions we had with our parents have strongly influenced our behaviors, thoughts, feelings, and attitudes as adults. With regard to anger and its expression, these feelings and behaviors were usually modeled for us by our parents or parental figures or the culture in which we grew up.
SAHMSA Materials SAHMSA Website http://www.samhsa.gov/ Anger Management Manualhttp://store.samhsa.gov/product/SMA08-4213 Anger Management Workbookhttp://store.samhsa.gov/product/SMA08-4210 • Anger Management Online Manual with Bibliographyhttp://kap.samhsa.gov/products/manuals/pdfs/anger1.pdf