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Family Therapy Approaches

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Family Therapy Approaches - Setting the Stage

  • Definition: Psychotherapy focusing on the family unit to address child/adolescent emotional/behavioral issues. Involves modifying family dynamics, communication, and relational structures.
  • Core Goals:
    • Improve communication & problem-solving.
    • Alter maladaptive interaction patterns/roles.
    • Strengthen family cohesion, support, resilience.
    • Foster insight into individual/family needs.
    • Enhance parental effectiveness & child management.
  • Key Indications:
    • Conduct Disorder, ODD.
    • Eating Disorders (esp. Anorexia Nervosa).
    • Adolescent substance abuse.
    • Mood & Anxiety Disorders.
    • School refusal, academic issues.
    • High family conflict/dysfunction.
    • Adjustment to chronic illness, grief, trauma.

⭐ Family-Based Treatment (FBT), like the Maudsley model, is a first-line therapy for adolescent Anorexia Nervosa, often yielding better outcomes than individual approaches.

Family Therapy Approaches - Structure & Strategy

1. Structural Family Therapy (Salvador Minuchin)

  • Focus: Family structure, organization, and interactional patterns.
  • Core Concepts:
    • Structure: Invisible set of functional demands organizing family interaction.
    • Subsystems: Smaller units within the family (e.g., spousal, parental, sibling).
    • Boundaries: Rules defining who participates and how. Types: clear (healthy), rigid (disengaged), diffuse (enmeshed).
  • Goals: Restructure the family; modify dysfunctional transactional patterns; establish clear boundaries and hierarchy.
  • Techniques: Joining, mapping, enactment, reframing, boundary making, unbalancing.

2. Strategic Family Therapy (Jay Haley, Cloe Madanes, MRI Group)

  • Focus: Problem-solving; changing specific problematic behaviors and communication patterns.
  • Core Concepts:
    • Power & Hierarchy: Who makes decisions and whose opinion matters.
    • Communication: Focus on how communication maintains problems.
    • Symptoms as Communication: Symptoms are seen as a way to communicate or control.
  • Goals: Resolve the presenting problem; interrupt maladaptive interactional sequences.
  • Techniques: Directives (straightforward or paradoxical), reframing, ordeals, pretend techniques.

Structural Family Therapy: Subsystems and Boundaries

High-Yield Fact: In Structural Family Therapy, enmeshment (diffuse boundaries) often leads to ↓ individual autonomy, while disengagement (rigid boundaries) results in ↓ emotional connection and support within the family system. This balance is crucial for healthy family functioning and is a frequently tested concept regarding family dynamics and pathology development in children and adolescents.

📌 Mnemonic (Structural): "Minuchin Structures Boundaries" (MSB - Minuchin, Structure, Boundaries).

Family Therapy Approaches - Systems & Self

  • Systemic Family Therapy (Milan Model)
    • Focus: Current family interactions, "family games".
    • Core: Problems serve system function; families rule-governed.
    • Techniques:
      • Hypothesizing: Therapist's initial ideas.
      • Circular Questioning: Highlights differing perceptions, interconnections.
      • Neutrality: Therapist equidistant.
      • Positive Connotation: Reframes problem behavior positively.
      • Rituals: Symbolic acts to alter family rules.
  • Bowenian Family Systems Therapy (Intergenerational)
    • Focus: Intergenerational patterns; ↑ individual differentiation.
    • Key Concepts:
      • Differentiation of Self: Separating thoughts/feelings, self from family. Low differentiation → fusion/cutoff.
      • Triangles: 3-person system to diffuse dyadic anxiety.
      • Nuclear Family Emotional System: Emotional patterns in one generation (e.g., marital conflict).
      • Family Projection Process: Parents transmit their issues to a child.
      • Multigenerational Transmission: Family patterns repeat across generations.
      • Emotional Cutoff: Distancing to manage unresolved attachment.
      • Sibling Position: Birth order influences roles.
    • Goal: ↑ differentiation of self. Bowenian Genogram with Differentiation and Triangles

    A core goal in Bowenian therapy is to help individuals achieve a higher level of "Differentiation of Self," reducing emotional reactivity and improving autonomy within the family.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Structural (Minuchin): Addresses family structure, boundaries (enmeshed/disengaged), and hierarchies to restructure interactions.
  • Strategic (Haley/MRI): Problem-solving approach using paradoxical directives to alter specific behavioral sequences.
  • Systemic (Milan): Explores family beliefs with circular questioning, neutrality, and hypothesizing.
  • Bowenian: Focuses on differentiation of self, emotional triangles, and multigenerational patterns (genograms).
  • Behavioral/CBT: Uses learning principles and cognitive restructuring for communication and problem-solving.
  • Overall Goal: Improve family communication, conflict resolution, and functioning.

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