1 / 20

Problem Gambling Treatment: Family & Finances

Problem Gambling Treatment: Family & Finances. Joanna Franklin MS NCGC II Maryland Center of Excellence on Problem Gambling University of Maryland School of Medicine Jfranklin.ipg@gmail.com www.MdProblemGambling.com. Children of Pathological Gamblers.

una
Download Presentation

Problem Gambling Treatment: Family & Finances

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Problem Gambling Treatment: Family & Finances Joanna Franklin MS NCGC II Maryland Center of Excellence on Problem Gambling University of Maryland School of Medicine Jfranklin.ipg@gmail.com www.MdProblemGambling.com

  2. Children of Pathological Gamblers • High School Youth with a problem gambling parent were more likely to report: • Abusing stimulant drugs • Overeating • Describe childhood as unhappy • Be depressed or Suicidal • Have legal action pending (Jacobs 1989) • More likely to have a gambling problem themselves (Lesieur and Klein 1987)

  3. Children of Problem Gamblers • 8-10 other people are affected by every pathological gambler. (Lobsinger & Beckett, 1996) • Consequences include but are not limited to: • Financial losses • Communication problems • Trust Issues • Chronic lying • Legal problems • Domestic violence (23-40% - Gerstein et al 1999 and Bland, Newman, Orn & Stebelsky 1993)

  4. Family Treatment Issues • Monitor levels of conflict • Assertiveness and Communication Skills Training • *Coaching on financial issues and decision making • May need money manager outside of family • Treat within the context of the Culture.

  5. Family Treatment Issues • Assess need for individual counseling for family members • Time for expressing anger, fear, distrust • Specific counseling around abuse/violence • Facilitate discussion around issues of separation/divorce • Counseling on limit setting, detaching with love

  6. Family Treatment Issues • Education • On comorbid psychopathology and risk factors as well as pathological gambling • Coping with suicidality • Interaction of gambling progression and psychopathology • Maintaining personal as well as financial safety for family • PG as potentially recurring, chronic disorder

  7. Family Treatment Issues • Dealing with Toxic Anger • Control v. Involvement (limit setting with family members) • Family pathology often severe • Family offers little or no support • No local self-help resources • Family pathology and money management- need for financial safety

  8. Family Treatment Issues • Help family understand shared dynamics/pathology • Listening/Communication skills • Here and Now orientation • Maintaining adult ego state • Conflict Resolution and Problem Solving skills

  9. Treatment Issues • Final Assessment • Discussion of relapse warning signs • How can family provide feedback • How can gambler listen to feedback • Gambler’s and family members’ triggers

  10. Integrative Behavioral Couples Therapy IBCT • (Jacobson & Christensen 1996, 2001) suggests: • Regularly discuss differences between the couple- this is to reinforce seeing the problem as an “it.” • 2. Discuss upcoming events in light of their differences anticipating potential conflicts. • 3. Therapist and couple would process recent negative events with empathic joining to diminish negative feelings around unpleasant exchanges. • 4. Process positive events reinforcing how each contributes through tolerance and acceptance of each other’s difference.

  11. IBCT & Family Gambling Treatment Couples seem to abandon quickly precise, clearly operationalized strategies so carefully taught. (Jacobson & Christensen 1996) Data analysis indicates behavioral change can only go so far. People have a limited capacity to change. Successful intimate relationships exhibit a high degree of tolerance. Developed the paradox of acceptance and change-we change best when we feel accepted. Rather than teaching an array of artificial communication techniques, wouldn’t make more sense to teach strategies that felt natural.

  12. IBCT Family Treatment • Present the couple with a formulation of how things got the way they are. • A tentative hypothesis for which the couple provides feedback • Provides a tool for empathic joining- problem is the “it”, not him or her, or him and him, or her and her. • Polarization vs. acceptance: each tries to change the other, digs in heels, acts out, control battles…

  13. Financial Management Issues: • The Budget vs. Asset Protection Plan • G.A. Pressure Relief Group • List of all debts and creditors • List monthly expenses • List of all income and assets • Prepare the Plan • Restitution • Money Management

  14. Assessing Debt

  15. Defining Asset Protection Plan

  16. Defining Monthly Expenses

  17. Other Personal/Emotional Debts

  18. Money Protection Plan • Case examples – Sally • 58 year old, school teacher • Depleted savings, owes $10,000 on credit cards, cashed in insurance policies, bad checks • She has always managed finances • Husband very angry, very controlling, relationship marked by power struggles • Children live out of state, but very supportive • Has close friend who is recovering alcoholic and wants to be supportive • Husband’s brother is financial planner

  19. IBCT Family Treatment • Caution: • Over-predicting of negative consequences • Catastrophizing crisis circumstances-believing “I can’t cope.” • Anger as a defense against re-victimization • Self-blame for gambling behavior • Response: • Cost-benefit analysis • Concrete examination of resources • Anger reduction techniques- alternative defenses, focus on self and personal growth. • Challenge “character” conclusions about self

  20. Treatment Resources: Counseling the Problem Gambler: A Self Regulation Manual Joseph Ciarrocchi PhD. Pathological Gambling: Eitology, Comorbidity and Treatment. Nancy Petry PhD Don’t Leave it to Chance . E.J. Federman, C.E.Drebing & C. Krebs. Losing Your Shirt. M. Heineman Behind the 8 Ball. L. Berman & M.E. Siegel. Personal Financial Strategies for the Loved Ones of Problem Gamblers.National Endowment for Financial Education and National Council on Problem Gambling. Gamblers Anonymous Pressure Relief Workbook www.Gamblersanonymous.org

More Related