Chapter 10 alcohol
Important for the client to be given credit for the therapeutic WORK being done
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Therapist should:
Acknowledge the feelings of the individual Resist talking the individual out of those feelings
Activity groups
Activity or project is undertaken Helps clients to identify areas of strength and weakness in interpersonal relationships
Self-Help for Families: Al-Anon
Advocates that the only person anyone can change or control is oneself
Self-Help for Families:Alateen
Alateen - Focuses on teenagers with an alcohol-dependent parent
Behavioral couples therapy
Assumes that the couple's interactions reinforce drinking Focuses on building alternative behaviors that support abstinence
Family Involvement in Alcohol Treatment: Couples and Family Therapies
Behavioral couples therapy Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT) Multidimensional family therapy Family support network
Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT)
Brief therapy for the family member who lives with a treatment-resistant partner Provides actions that can be taken against domestic violence
Therapeutic Relationship
Client-clinician relationship is not based on liking one another
Motivational enhancement therapy
Combines assessment and feedback Draws upon the principles of motivational interviewing
Problem-solving groups
Develop an awareness of potential stressful situations, identify the old, habitual response patterns, recognize how these patterns have created problems, and then to try new behaviors
Multidimensional family therapy
Directed at substance-abusing adolescents Aimed at providing coping and problem-solving skills
Community Reinforcement and Family Training (CRAFT)..
Emphasizes actions that can be taken to defuse escalating arguments or conflicts
Group work
Explore new behaviors Instill hope in one another
Family Involvement in Alcohol Treatment
Guidelines Concentrate on the interaction and not the content Teach family members how to check things out communication is huge Discourage the tendency to lay blame on someone else (which alcoholics OFTEN do!)
Individual Counseling: Education
Helps a client handle feelings of guilt and low self-esteem Successful recovery is related to a client's understanding of an alcohol use disorder as a medical condition
Relapse prevention:Common elements
Identifying high-risk relapse situations and developing strategies to deal with them --Seeing relapse as a process, not as an event Dealing with drug and alcohol cues and cravings Facing social pressures Creating and nurturing a supportive social network
Boomerang effect
In the process of being kind to and understanding of others, the members are in turn forced to accord themselves similar treatment
Family Interventions
Introduced by the Johnson Institute (an advocacy group) in Minneapolis Successful treatment can occur in a number of situations in which the initial entry into treatment might be coercive - hitting "rock bottom" not necessary Best treatment outcomes are those in which the stakes are quite clear
Family Issues: Recovering families must:
Learn to communicate in direct ways and to trust one another
Case manager
Liaison and advocate with external groups or the courts - pretty important to keep balance and good communication between rehab and legal mandates
Johnson-Style Intervention
Meeting of family, other concerned persons, and the affected individual under the direction of a trained clinician - INTERVENTION!!! Family members: Present incidents related to drinking that has caused concern, in an objective, straightforward manner
A Relational Intervention Sequence for Engagement (ARISE)
Modification of the Johnson-style intervention Uses a stepped approach and begins with the least demanding option Therapist acts as a consultant and coach to the concerned family members FIRST, who then meets the alcohol-drug-involved member
Administrative tasks
NEED to run the rehab
Psychoeducational groups
Organized around a lecture, film, or presentation by a specialist in the substance abuse field, followed by a group discussion
Family support network
Outpatient treatment program for substance-abusing adolescents
Support groups
Promote self-awareness, support abstinence, and help identify the ways in which people sabotage themselves
Individual Counseling: Observation
Provides data for making hypotheses Therapist should guide the conversation to cover everything transpiring in the individual's life
Types of Groups
Psychoeducational groups Support groups Problem-solving groups Activity groups
Family Issues: children
Reassured as they might assume they are the cause of the problem
Self-disclosure
Sharing the facts of one's life and speaking of one's feelings and values
Individual Counseling: Feedback
Therapist provides accurate and specific descriptions of the client's behavior Therapist's willingness and ability to simply describe what is observed is a potent therapeutic tool Allows clients to see how their drinking compares to that of others
Avoiding possible mis-steps
Therapist should not take on tasks that clients can do for themselves Counselors avoid anything that might cause the individual discomfort
Family Issues: Problems prompted by entering treatment
Unrealistic expectations for treatment Family members feel guilt and remorse after listening to the affected person's views