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Family Systems Theory. There are several categories of theories that exist under the umbrella of “ Family Systems Theory ”. Major Players in the development of Family Systems Theory. Gregory Bateson: the “ pioneer ” of applying systems thinking to human interaction.
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Family Systems Theory There are several categories of theories that exist under the umbrella of “Family Systems Theory”
Major Players in the development of Family Systems Theory • Gregory Bateson: the “pioneer” of applying systems thinking to human interaction. • Palo Alto Group: In 1952, this research team defined the family as a homeostatic systems whose “parts” co-vary with each other to maintain equilibrium • Virginia Satir: defined the functional family as an open system where there is an open exchange of communication; dysfunctional families (closed systems) are more rigid and maladaptive.
Satir’s Conjoint Family Therapy Treatment Goals • Establish trust • Develop awareness through experience • Create a new understanding of and among members • Have family express and apply new understanding • Have the family use their new behaviors outside therapy
Key event: • The opening of the Washington Institute of Family therapy in 1974 • Key players: Salvador Minuchin • The family therapy model developed there has three roots: 1. Strategic therapy 2. Theories of the Palo Alto group 3. Structural theory of Minuchin
Strategic Family Theory • Asserts that family problems exist in order to protect the family from disintegration • Problematic relationships are at some point useful • Counseling should intervene in order to “interrupt” the protective yet problematic patterns5
Directives serve 3 purposes: 1. To facilitate change 2. To keep the therapist’s influence “alive” during the week 3. To stimulate family reaction Therapist’s role: 1. Attend to what is the “nature of the problem (as defined by family members) 2. Focus on how the family is attempting to resolve the problem & evaluate Role of therapist in Strategic Theory
Structural Family Theory • Counselor becomes involved with family members, pushing and being pushed • Emphasis is on “action” during therapy • Minuchin believed the therapist should be “unique themselves” • Requires that family members are willing to take risks
Characteristics observed in structural family therapy • Bringing the family transactions into counseling space • Counselor alternating between participating and observing as a way of “unbalancing” the system by supporting one member against the other • Different types of responses to family members’ intrusion into each other’s psychological “space”
Transgenerational Theory • Key Player: Murray Bowen • Core concept = differentiation of self • “How people differ from one another in terms of their sensitivity to one another and their varying abilities to preserve a degree of autonomy in the face of pressures of togetherness”
Bowen: Two different systems of human functioning (1) Emotional & Reactive System (2) Intellectual and Rational system
Concepts: Family Projection Process (FPP) • Suggests that the ego differentiation achieved by children will generally approximate that of their parents. • High level differentiation = well-defined sense of self and low emotional reactivity • Low level differentiation = poor sense of self and high emotional reactivity
When two poorly differentiated parents who are overwhelmed with anxiety seek relief by involving a third party (the child) This is how low level differentiation is passed on. Bowen’s ideas and concepts are extended in McGoldrick’s work with genograms. Concept: Triangulation
First order change Occurs when a family modifies problem behaviors yet maintains its present structure; focus is on changing family behaviors not the family structure. Second-order change Refers to transformations in either the structure of internal order of the family; focus is on altering the basic structure of a family system. The Process of Change
Interventions (General) • Specific factors: counseling activities that are specific to a particular counseling approach • Nonspecific factors: change-producing elements present in regardless of theoretical orientation • Best known and empirically researched is working alliance.
Working Alliance (Bordin, 1994) • Three components: 1. Task: in-therapy activities for participants 2. Goal: the outcomes that are the target of intervention 3. Bond: the positive, personal attachments between client(s) and counselor
1. Social - greeting the family and helping them feel comfortable 2. Problem - each person is invited to define the problem 3. Interaction - all members talk together about the problem while the counselor watches and listens 4. Goal-setting - family members are invited to speak about changes everyone wants from therapy. 5. Ending - directives are given and next appointment is scheduled. Common Element: The Family Interview (5 Stages)
Research & Family Systems Therapy Support for family therapy as an intervention with: • substance abuse • depression • parenting • delinquency • some DSM IV conditions such as schizophrenia, agoraphobia, etc.
Research by Hampson & Beavors (1996): • 434 families treated in a family therapy clinic in Dallas • Found the following predictors of successful treatment: -# of family therapy sessions attended -Third-party ratings of family competence -Self-ratings of family competence -Therapists’ ratings of working alliance
Limitations of Family Therapy • Often seen as too directive • “Family” is a culturally determined phenomenon; beware biases! • Ignores the different socialization processes operating for men and women