Structural Family Therapy Flashcards
Structural Family Therapy
Theory of Change
Change occurs through restructuring the family’s organization.
Structural Family Therapy
Therapist’s Role
•Therapist is active and involved.
•The therapist helps the family understand how family structure (relationships and hierarchies) can be changed, the impact of rituals and rules, and how
new patterns of interaction can be integrated into the family
Structural Family Therapy
Treatment Goals
- Restructure family system to allow for symptom relief and constructive problem solving
- Change dysfunctional transactional patterns and create new ways of relating
- Help create flexible boundaries
Structural Family Therapy - Primary Concepts
Alliances
Subgroups based on gender, generation, developmental tasks
Structural Family Therapy - Primary Concepts
Coalitions
Alignments where 2 or more family members join together to form a bond against another family member
Structural Family Therapy - Primary Concepts
Power Hierarchy
Leadership and direction must be provided by the adults,
typically parents. Sometimes when parents are intimidated or insecure, the power is upside down and it leads to chaos
Structural Family Therapy - Primary Concepts
Subsystems
Families organize themselves by generation, relationship, and necessity. Examples: marital subsystem – spouses; parental subsystem: parents; executive subsystem: people who run the family; sibling subsystem – kids.
Structural Family Therapy - Primary Concepts
Disengaged Boundaries
Where family members are isolated from each other. Can lead to AOD use and is a result of rigid boundaries
Structural Family Therapy - Primary Concepts
Enmeshed Boundaries
Family members are overly dependent and too
closely involved and reactive to other family members.
Can lead to incest.
Structural Family Therapy - Interventions
Joining
Therapist’s first task; involves blending in with the family, adapting the family’s affect, style, and language
Structural Family Therapy - Interventions
Tracking
The therapist pays close attention to family members and how they relate to one another during an enactment or spontaneous behavioral sequence, noticing boundaries, coalitions, roles, rules, etc.
Structural Family Therapy - Interventions
Mimesis
The therapist tracks the family’s style of communication and uses it.
Structural Family Therapy - Interventions
Unbalancing
Supporting someone who is in a one-down position, thus changing hierarchical position.
Structural Family Therapy - Interventions
Reframe
Putting the presenting problem in a perspective that is both different from what the family brings and more workable.
Structural Family Therapy - Interventions
Enactment
The actualization of transactional patterns under the control of the therapist. It allows the therapist to observe how family members mutually regulate their behaviors, and to determine the place of the problem behavior
within the sequence of transactions.