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OUB 804. From Parent guidance to Family-oriented intervention. Training framework. Systems-oriented Relational framework Evidence-based practice Resiliency/Competency based. Training competencies. COMPETENCIES Application of scientific knowledge practice Psychological assessment
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OUB 804 From Parent guidance to Family-oriented intervention
Training framework • Systems-oriented • Relational framework • Evidence-based practice • Resiliency/Competency based
Training competencies • COMPETENCIES • Application of scientific knowledgepractice • Psychological assessment • Psychological intervention • Consultation and collaboration • THEORETICAL PRINCIPLES • Integrative assimilation
Training competencies • PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT • Accurate self-assessment • ETHICAL ISSUES • Unique to families • Client • Confidentiality • Goals
Biopsychosocial – Engel (1977) Body/Mind – Kandel (1998) Bio-ecological - Bronfenbrenner (1994) Developmental psychopathology - SYSTEMIC MODELS
Bio-psychosocial model - Engel • Psychiatry has become a hodge-podge of unscientific opinions, assorted philosophies and “schools of thought”, mixed metaphors, role diffusion, propaganda and politicking for mental health and other esoteric goals. • Ludwig: “The medical model premises that sufficient deviation from normal represents disease, that disease is known to known or unknown natural causes, and that elimination of these causes will result in cure or improvement in an individual” • Engel and Von Bertallanfy – general systems theory
Developmental psychopathology • Family as the central context for understanding the development of children’s adjustment problems • Focus: adjustment and maladjustment • Interrelation • Genetic proclivities • Family subsystems • Social contexts and ecologies
Principles and assumptions • Concerned with individual differences in maladaptive patterns of functioning • Charting developmental trajectories in functioning • Explaining continuity and discontinuity in development • Attention: specific processes, developmental processes, normal and abnormal functioning
Risk and protective factors • Dynamic mediating processes accounting for adaptation and maladaptation • More complexity in conceptualising process underlying normal development • Interaction of both risk and protective factors – transactional rather than linear • Mediational pathways – why risk factors lead to maladaptive outcomes
Parent-child subsystem • Parenting – socialisation of child: desirable or non-desirable outcomes • Towards a process model – principles: • Transactional – process unfolds over time • Transformational/epigenetic: change is basic • Multivariate – multiple dimensions; horizontal and vertical stressors
Systemic context for assessment – McGoldrick, Gerson, Petry (2008) • Vertical stressors: Family generational patterns, myths, triangles secrets, religious beliefs, addictions, violence, racism, politics • Horizontal stressors: Develomental (life transitions), unpredictable (accidents, chronic illness, unemployment, disasters) and historical (economic and political events)
Systemic models • Integrating genetics, mind and social world • Mind/brain integration • Mental processes derive from the brain • Genes and protein products • Genes and social/developmental factors • Learning produces gene alterations • Nurture ultimately expressed as nature
Body/mind integration • Mind is biologically based • Genes determine the biological base • Experience alters genetic expression • Reciprocity (Gene-experience)
Propositions • Body – Mind – Social/Relational world • Integrated system • Co-evolve • Changes in one system will have impact • Genetic constraints • Set is sensitive to change by psychotherapy • Praxis: Entry points; affecting change; family-oriented intervention
Implications • Therapist as agent of change • World unstable and in disequilibrium • Directional hypotheses • Interface is important • Genetics a proclivity not a destiny • Family task: calibrating a fit • Causes versus fitness
Example: Emotion regulation • Emotions • Whole-bodied phenomena that involve changes in domains of central and peripheral physiology (body), subjective experience (mind) and behaviour (relational) • Intrinsic (temperament, biological maturation) and extrinsic (caregiver support and flexibility) factors
Caregiver influences • Prenatal stress • Hyperactivity • Attention deficits • Maladaptive social behaviour • Mechanism • Stress hormones alter the developing hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis: results in dysregulation of stress-response system
Caregiver influences • Maternal depression • Diminished responsiveness and emotional animation by 2 – 3 months • More subdued with non-depressed strangers • Interaction with a depressed caregiver undermine healthy emotional functioning as well as the emergence of behavioural and neurobiological emotion regulatory capacity • Oppositional behaviour : coercive interaction cycles • Less parental support • Internal characteristics of the child
Central to health + treatment Self-Concept Individual Relational Collectivist Relational orientation Internal representation Experience oneself Dimensions Focus Autonomy Connection Power Egalitarian Hierarchical Typologies Relational framework(Silverstein, 2006)
Rule-directed • Hierarchical and connected • Responsibility to group • Within established rules and guidelines • Authority common good • Response to societal change • Problems • Authority challenged • Abuse of power
Position-directed • Hierarchical and autonomous • One up/one down in relationships • Determining/maintaining place in relationships • Know thyself, present own interests • Problems • Power struggles and own interests • Dominant person has limited empathy • Position through individual positioning of power not clear cultural rules
Independence directed • Autonomous and egalitarian • Western ideal • Competing needs are managed • Compromise, give-and-take • Problems • Individuality is threatened • Agreed upon goals cannot be reached
Relationship directed • Egalitarian and connected • Women’s psychology • Shared responsibilities and commitment • Personal authenticity – connection to others • Problems • Authentic expression is limited • Harmony at expense of conflict • Devitalised – conflict avoidance
Evaluation • Keeps relationships central • Important to understand diversity • Worth • promoting stable, satisfying relationship • that support and facilitate • the well-being of each member • Ethical issues • Clinical goals set in collaboration
Evidence based family intervention(Larner, 2004) • Family therapy works • Systemic family therapy • Language-based • Client-directed • Relationally focused • Context, narrative, relationships • Scientist-practioner vs systemic practitioner
Criteria for evidence • Double-blind treatment with control groups and replication by at least two independent studies • Translated into a treatment manual • Treatment has been applied with specific client populations
Family therapy • Relational process • Generic for approaches based on • Broad systemic principles • Specifics vary • Application is flexible and pragmatic with integrative models becoming the norm • Emphasis: who says what to whom • Collaborative and reflective form of therapy • Gender, culture, politics, spirituality • Ecological intervention
Scientist-practitioner model • Lack of evidence for SPM itself • Research and implementation differs • Research setting vs clinical settings • “Why” and “How” – non-existent • Child psychiatric practice: interventions mostly psychosocial, contextual
Other types of evidence • Client feedback and satisfaction • Practical clinical experience • Practice protocols - multiple sources of information • Common factors in therapy • Client resourcefulness – 40% • Relationship (empathic/collaborative) – 30% • Client expectations – 15% • Therapeutic approach – 15%
Key tasks of the family therapist • Form collaborative relationships • Engage client’s hopes and expectations • More relational and client-driven than model driven
Efficacy of family-oriented intervention • Good global evidence • Specific evidence lacking • Brief therapy: depressed and bereaved children • Narrative therapy: psychosomatic problems; more effective than behavioural • ADD: low-dose medication; structural family therapy; parental behaviour management; school behavioural programmes
Efficacy of family-oriented intervention • Oppositional/conduct: Parent management intervention • Agoraphobia: CBT more effective in family context than individual • Schizophrenia: psycho-educational; medication; family counseling to manage stress
Efficacy of family-oriented intervention • Campbell (1997) • Schizophrenia • Depression • Behaviour problems in children • Conduct disorder in adolescence • Substance abuse • Physical illness
Efficacy of family-oriented intervention • Sandberg (1997) • Depression • Delinquency • Conduct disorder • Substance abuse • Eating disorders • Marital discord
Efficacy of family-oriented intervention • Asen (2002) – FT major treatment of choice for • Anorexia, psychosis and mood disorders • Sprenkle (2003) – Family treatment for • Conduct disorder and delinquency • Substance abuse • Childhood behaviour disorders • Severe mental illness • Affective disorders • Schizophrenia • Marital problems
Conclusion • Larner (2004) “In complex therapeutic systems evidence-based practice need to be applied in clinically relevant ways and family therapy is best practice. Especially in child and adolescent therapy.” • Kazdin and Weisz (1998) noted that all intervention with this age group is de facto family therapy whatever treatment is espoused.
Integrative practice model • Reimers (2001) – three principles for user-friendly family therapy • Be open to use mixed therapeutic approaches • Therapy approach should be tailored to the needs of particular families • Therapy should be based on outcome research and therapeutic relationship • Art and science of therapy • Pragmatic, creative, intuitive and curious • Value scientific method and clinical wisdom
Systemic practitioner model • What works for whom when – requires relational/systemic understanding • Relational work precursor for other EB treatments • Balance clinical experience, relational know-how and science • Research question: how to measure systemic progress in 1+a terms
Family-oriented assessment • Genogram assessment • Family Factors • McMaster’s model of family functioning • Beavers model • Circumplex model • Other family models • Structure your perception of meaningful events