Family Therapy Practice Flashcards
Structural Family Therapy Steps
(1) joining and accommodating
(2) enactment
(3) structural mapping
(4) highlighting and modifying interactions
(5) boundary making
(6) unbalancing
(7) challenging unproductive assumptions
JAESMHMIBMUCUA
Haley’s Strategic Stages of the Initial Interview
(1) Social Stage
(2) Problems Stage
(3) Interactional Stage
(4) Goal Setting Stage
(5) Task Oriented Stage
SPIGSTO
Steps of the MRI Strategic Approach
(1) Introduction of treatment set up
(2) Inquiry and definition of the problem
(3) Estimation of the behavior maintaining the problem
(4) Setting goals for treatment
(5) Selecting and making behavioral interventions
(6) Termination
IIESST
Satir’s 6 Stage Model of Change
- Status quo
- Introduction of foreign element
- Chaos
- Integration of new possibilities
- Practice
- New status quo
SICIPN
CBT Therapy Process
- Establish therapeutic relationship
- Develop positive expectancies (hope)
- Define clients’ clear concerns
- Implement change (intervention)
- Client follows through intervention
- Assess progress
ERDHDCICCCAP
First-order change
occurs when a problem is addressed by performing more or less of a given action within the existing system. Changes in the roles or at the behavioral level only…
This is akin to changing your foot’s pressure on the gas pedal in a car with a manual transmission. By changing your foot’s pressure, fuel is added or removed from the system and this affects the speed and RPM’s of your car. First-order change is not as sustainable
Second-order change
occurs as a fundamental rewriting of the system’s underlying rules. It is a systemic change in the structure and function of a family system. Changing the rules of interaction.
This is akin to shifting gears. When we add gas within a particular gear we can achieve a restricted range of speeds and RPMs. After shifting gears we are able to achieve new speeds that were previously not accessible to us or were damaging to the transmission.