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Learn about the importance of social skills in effective communication, and discover the step-by-step process of social skills training for individuals with dual disorders. This comprehensive resource provides valuable insights and practical tips for both clinicians and clients.
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Group Interventions for Dual Disorders Resources What are social skills? Logistics of skills training groups Steps of social skills training Skills training and stages of treatment
Social Skills Training Resources • Bellack, A. S., Mueser, K. T., Gingerich, S., & Agresta, J. (2004). Social Skills Training for Schizophrenia: A Step-by-Step Guide (Second ed.). New York: Guilford Press. • Liberman, R. P., DeRisi, W. J., & Mueser, K. T. (1989). Social Skills Training for Psychiatric Patients. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon. • Monti, P. M., Abrams, D. B., Kadden, R. M., & Cooney, N. L. (2002). Treating Alcohol Dependence. (2nd ed.). New York: Guilford Publications. • Mueser, K. T., Noordsy, D. L., Drake, R. E., & Fox, L. (2003). Integrated Treatment for Dual Disorders: A Guide to Effective Practice. New York: Guilford Press. • Roberts, L. J., Shaner, A., & Eckman, T. A. (1999). Overcoming Addictions: Skills Training for People with Schizophrenia. New York: W.W. Norton.
What are Social Skills? • Interpersonal skills necessary for effective communication • Abilities and behaviors that help people achieve instrumental and interpersonal goals • Broad categories of social skill include nonverbal, paralinguistic, verbal content, and interactive balance
Nonverbal Social Skills • Eye contact • Body posture • Body orientation • Facial expression • Gestures • Interpersonal distance
Paralinguistic Skills • Voice volume • Intonation, inflection • Speed and pace • Clarity
Verbal Content • Specific verbal components of skill, such as: • Use of feeling statements • Behavioral specificity • Appropriateness of content
Expressing Positive Feelings • Look at the person • Say exactly what they did that pleased you • Tell them how it made you feel
Expressing Negative Feelings • Look at the person: speak firmly • Say exactly what they did that upset you • Tell them how it made you feel • Suggest how person might prevent this happening in future
Starting A Conversation • Choose the right time and place • Introduce yourself or greet the person you want to talk with • Make small talk (for example the weather or sports) • Decide if the other person is listening or wants to talk
Refusing Drinks Or Drugs • Say “No” first • Suggest an alternative • Request the person to stop asking if they persist • Avoid making excuses
Interactive Balance • Response latency, including either delays or interruptions when responding to another person • Amount of speech by each person • Responsiveness to other’s speech and affect
Social Skills Training (SST) • Systematic approach to teaching new skills based on social learning theory • Skills taught gradually over time with extensive practice both in session and out of session • Broad range of applications of SST to both clinical and non-clinical populations
Relevance of Social Skills Training to Dual Disorders • Poor premorbid functioning often precedes onset of mental illness • Interpersonal dysfunction common in addiction • Substance use provides opportunities for socialization • People with mental illness may use substances to initiate or maintain relationships • Relationships may be coercive • Basic friendship skills needed as well as substance refusal
More Facts about Social Skills • Clients most often have mild skill impairments across multiple skill areas • Meshing (interactive balance) is on common focal skill deficit in many clients (due to slower information processing) • Social skills are strong predictors of community functioning, including relationships, work, independent living
Social Skills Training Groups • Primary goal is to teach new skills, not foster insight • Multiple training sessions often conducted weekly • Sessions usually conducted by 2 leaders following preplanned curriculum • Generalization of skills into clients’ natural environment is planned
Logistical Considerations • Duration and frequency of sessions • Number of clients (5-8) • Reinforcement for participation (e.g., refreshments) • Competing demands (e.g., not having group at same time as a recreational activity) • Staff support
Leader Qualifications • Enthusiasm • Behavioral orientation • Patience • Ability to take a “shaping” approach to reinforcing gradual change • Knowledgeable about dual disorders • Socially skilled
Principles of Learning • Modeling • Reinforcement • Shaping • Generalization
Assessing Clients • Does the client make others feel uncomfortable? • Is the client able to initiate and maintain conversations? • Can he/she express feelings? • Can he/she get others to respond positively? • Is he/she socially isolated?
Rules for Social Skills Group • Stay on the group topic • No interrupting • No name calling or cursing • Respect confidentiality
Steps of Social Skills Training • 1. Establish rationale for the skill • Elicit reasons for learning the skill from group participants • Acknowledge all contributions • Provide additional reasons not mentioned by group members
Steps (cont.) • 2. Discuss steps of the skill • Break the skill down into 3 or 4 steps • Write the steps on a board or poster • Discuss the reason for each step • Check for understanding of each step
Steps (cont.) • 3. Model the skill in a role play • Explain that you will demonstrate the skill in a role play • Plan out the role play in advance • Use two leaders to model the skill • Keep the role play short and simple
Steps (cont.) • 4. Review the role play with the participants • Discuss whether each step of the skill was used in the role play • Ask group members to evaluate the effectiveness of the role play • Keep the review brief and to the point
Steps (cont.) • 5. Engage a client in a role play of the same situation • Request the client to try the skill in a role play with one of the leaders • Ask the client questions to make sure he or she understands their goal • Instruct members to observe the client • Start with a client who is more skilled or is likely to be compliant
Steps (cont.) • 6. Provide positive feedback • Elicit positive feedback from group members about the client’s skills • Encourage feedback that is specific • Cut off any negative feedback • Praise effort and provide hints to group members about good performance
Steps (cont.) • 7. Proved corrective feedback • Elicit suggestions for how client could do the skill better next time • Limit feedback to one or two suggestions • Strive to communicate the suggestion in a positive, upbeat manner
Steps (cont.) • Engage the client in another role play of the same situation • Request that the client change one behavior in the role play • Check by asking questions to make sure the client understands the suggestion • Try to work on behaviors that are salient and changeable
Steps (cont.) • 9. Provide additional feedback • Focus first on the behavior that the client was requested to change • Engage client in 2-4 role plays with feedback after each one • Use other behavior shaping strategies to improve skills, such as coaching, prompting, supplemental modeling • Be generous but specific when providing positive feedback
Steps (cont.) • 10. Assign homework • Give an assignment to practice the skill • Ask group members to identify situations in which they could use the skill • When possible, tailor the assignment to each client’s level of skill
Follow-Up Sessions • Review homework • Set up role plays based on client’s personal experiences-actual or anticipated • If no experiences, use other role play situations • For each client, engage in 1-4 role plays • Use positive feedback and other teaching strategies to improve skill over several role plays
Supplementary Skills Training Techniques • Coaching • Prompting • Contrast modeling • Discrimination training
Curriculum for SST • Starting & maintaining conversations • Conflict management • Assertiveness • Community living • Friendship and dating • Medication management • Vocational / work • Drug and alcohol abuse
Additional Skills • Social-sexual skills (e.g., asking a partner to wear a condom) • Avoiding stressful situations • Discussing health concerns with a doctor or nurse • Telephone skills (e.g., making appointments, leaving messages, dealing with telemarketers) • Leisure & recreation skills
CONVERSATION SKILLS • Listening to others • Starting conversations • Maintaining conversations by: • asking questions • giving factual information • expressing feelings • Ending conversations • Staying on the topic set by another person • What to do when someone goes off the topic • Getting your point across
CONFLICT MANAGEMENT SKILLS • Compromise and negotiation • Disagreeing with another’s opinion without arguing • Responding to untrue accusations • Leaving stressful situations
Stage-wise Skills Training for Dual Disorders • Appropriate at all stages of treatment • Early stages (engagement, persuasion) focus on motives for using substances • Later stages (active tx., relapse prevention) also address high risk situations, including refusal skills
What Do We Do During Engagement? • Goal: To establish a working alliance with the client • Clinical Strategies 1. Outreach 2.Practical assistance 3.Crisis intervention 4.Social network support 5.Legal constraints
What Do We Do During Persuasion? • Goal: To motivate the client to address substance abuse as a problem • Clinical Strategies 1.Psychiatric stabilization 2. “Persuasion” groups 3.Family psychoeducation 4.Rehabilitation 5.Structured activity 6.Education 7.Motivational interviewing
What Do We Do During Active Treatment? • Goal: • To reduce client’s use/abuse of substance • Clinical Strategies 1. Self-monitoring 2. Social skills training 3. Social network interventions 4. Self-help groups
5. Substitute activities 6. Close monitoring 7. Cognitive-behavioral techniques to address: • High risk situations • Craving • Motives for substance use • Socialization • Persistent symptoms • Pleasure enhancement
What Do We Do During Relapse Prevention? • Goals: • To maintain awareness of vulnerability and expand recovery to other areas • Clinical Strategies 1. Self-help groups 2. Cognitive-behavioral and supportive interventions to enhance functioning in: • Work, relationships, leisure activities, health, and quality of life
Motives for Substance Use and Relevant Skills • Socialization: conversational skills, making friends • Leisure & recreation: developing new recreational activities • Coping: expressing negative feelings, cognitive restructuring to address anxiety & depression
High Risk Situations • Offers to use at a party • Running into a former dealer • Feeling depressed or anxious • Invitation to use with boy/girlfriend • Money or paycheck in pocket
Curriculum for SST for DD • Conversational skills • Friendship and intimacy skills • Expressing negative feelings • Conflict management • Relapse prevention planning • Dealing with offers to use substances from friends, family, dealers
Persuasion Groups • Primarily for persuasion stage • Keep short (or take a break) • Co-facilitated • Open format • Non-confrontational • Recurrent use common • Refreshments
Persuasion Groups • Peer role models • Self-help materials not useful • Psychoeducation about substance abuse and mental illness • Weekly meetings • Use of hospitalizations, trouble with the law, etc.
Curriculum-based Persuasion Groups (Mueser et al., 2003) • 21-sessions • Psychoeducational/motivational • Focus initially on mental illness, then substance abuse, then recovery • Combines education with group process • Geared for persuasion stage, but appropriate for later stages of treatment
Group Session Outline • #1: Intro to group members & facilitators • #2: Introduction to concept of recovery • #3:Schizophrenia & related disorders • #4: Mood disorders • #5: Anxiety disorders • #6: Stress-vulnerability model
Medication Stress Coping Substance Abuse Severity of SMI Stress-Vulnerability Model Biological Vulnerability