Title: Family Therapy and Mental Health
1Family Therapy and Mental Health
- University of Guelph
- Office of Open Learning
2Course Instructors
- William Corrigan, MTS, RMFT,
- AAMFT Approved Supervisor
- 519-578-7443
- williamcorrigan_at_rogers.com
- Carlton Brown, M.Sc., M.Div., RMFT,
- AAMFT Supervisor Candidate
- 905-388-8728
- carl_at_mftsolutions.ca
3By the End of Today
- Introductions
- Historical overview of family therapy
- Models of illness in a developmental perspective
- Assessing structure and function (the McMaster
Model) - Classification of mental illness (ICD-9, DSM-IV)
4Ice Breaker
- Pick a card
- Half the cards depict psychiatric symptoms or
illnesses - Half the cards depict psychiatric medications
- Find your mate!
5Introductions
- Name
- Background/experience in mental health
- What fascinates you about the field of mental
health? - What makes you nervous/afraid about the field of
mental health?
6Historical Overview of Family Therapy and Mental
Health
- Early psychotherapy dominated by
- Sigmund Freud (1856 1939)
- Carl Rogers (1902 1987)
- Both assumed that psychopathology arose from
unhealthy interactions with others - Treated by a private relationship
- (client-therapist)
7Pioneers of Family Therapy
- Murray Bowen (1913 1990)
- Psychiatrist specialized in schizophrenia
- 1951, used a cottage on grounds of Menninger
Clinic in Topeka, Kansas to study families of
schizophrenics - developed ideas about mother-child symbiosis
- 1954, NIMH, hospitalized whole families of
schizophrenics for observation and research - Emphasized cost effectiveness of family therapy
better results sooner
8Pioneers of Family Therapy
- Salvador Minuchin
- Psychiatrist, trained in Argentina
- Developed a family approach to working with
delinquents and urban slum families - Became director of the Philadelphia Child
Guidance Clinic in 1965 and by the 1970s it was
the worlds leading center for Family Therapy and
training (Nichols Schwartz, 1995) - Developed Structural Family Therapy, 1974
9Pioneers of Family Therapy
- Palo Alto Group
- Bateson, Haley, Weakland, Jackson Satir
- 1956, Toward a Theory of Schizophrenia, one of
the most discussed papers in the history of
psychiatry - 1959, Jackson forms MRI, independent of Bateson
project, Satir joins him from Chicago - 1967, Watzlawick, Bodin, Weakland Fisch form
the Brief Therapy Center at MRI
10Pioneers of Family Therapy
- Palo Alto Group
- Benefits
- New language
- Interpersonal instead of intrapsychic
- Creative
- Risks
- Reduces therapy to a game of control
- Simplistically applied, it can do harm
- Implies that interactions cause illness (maybe
not)
11Family therapy in the 21st Century
- Systems still at the core
- Intelligent systems (beyond inanimate)
- Differential impact
- Causal processes
- Individual symptomatology
- Integration of family systems with early theories
of psychotherapy - Increasing influence of biology
- Lebow JL (2005) Handbook of Clinical Family
Therapy, New York John Wiley Sons
12Break!
13The Family Lifecycleand Mental Illness
14Models of Illness in a Developmental Perspective
- Biology
- Models of Individual Development
- The Family Life Cycle
- Models of illness
15Biology
- (Paul Tillich no psychology, sociology or
spirituality without biology) - Genes code the synthesis of all biological
proteins - proteins comprise enzymes that help make
neurotransmitters - neurotransmitters affect the way we think and feel
16Neurotransmitters
- Acetylcholine memory
- Serotonin mood
- Dopamine thinking and movement
17- All thinking, feeling and behaviour has a
biological basis
18Individual Life Cycle
- Erikson
- Piaget
- Kohlberg
- Mahler
- Kegan
- Solomon
19Erikson
- Trust vs. mistrust
- Object permanency first task of the ego
- Sense of being all right
- Always a shadow of paradise forfeited
- Applications
- Borderline Personality Disorder (object
permanency) - Being all right vs. psychodynamic theory of
psychosis development - Communications theory, narrative, and its never
too late to have a happy childhood
20Erikson
- Autonomy vs. shame and doubt
- Holding on, letting go
- Anal stage
- Doing well enough
- Shame upright and exposed
- Doubt what I have left behind (undone)
- Applications OCD? Depression?
21Erikson
- Initiative vs. guilt
- Industry vs. inferiority
- Identity vs. role confusion
- Intimacy vs. isolation
- Generativity vs. stagnation
- Ego integrity vs. despair
22Piaget
- Sensorimotor intelligence (0 2 years)
- Reflexes
- Coordination of reflexes
- Making interesting events reappear
- Means/ends and search for absent objects
- Experiments (new means)
- Imagery to invent new means and object permanence
23Piaget
- Prelogical thought (2 5 years)
- Inference through images and symbols
- Not logical
- Magical thinking
- Confusion of imagined with real events
- Confusion of perception with actual change (e.g.
fluid in a tall thin glass looks more than same
in short fat glass, four pieces of peanut butter
sandwich is more than the same sandwich cut in
two)
24Piaget
- Concrete operational thought (6 10 yr)
- Able to reason logically about concrete objects
- Classification, e.g. humans belong to the animal
kingdom, dinosaur enthusiast - Ordering, comparison, e.g. if altb and bltc then altc
25Piaget
- Formal operational thought (11 yr to adult)
- Formation of the inverse of the reciprocal
- Capacity to order triads of relations
- True formal thought. Construction of all
possible combinations of relations, systematic
isolation of variables, deductive
hypothesis-testing - The ability to see the world from perspectives
other than your own concrete position
26Kohlbergs moral stages
- Preconventional
- Heteronomous morality (avoid punishment)
- Instrumental purpose (serve own needs)
- Conventional
- Mutual (Be a good person)
- Social system (Keep the system going)
- Postconventional
- Social contract (freely entered into)
- Universal ethics (universal moral principles)
27Margaret Mahler
- Normal Developmental Stages of Infants
- Autistic
- Symbiotic
- Separation-individuation
- Differentiation
- Practicing
- Rapprochement
- Consolidation of individuality
28The Family Life Cycle
- Individual life cycle is embedded within the
family life cycle - We are born into and raised in a context the
family with a history, rules, roles, etc. - View symptoms and dysfunction within the context
of the system
29The Family Life Cycle
- Symptoms and dysfunction are examined in
- a context and in relation to what the culture
considers normal over time - In family therapy, we try to help families cope
better with their issues so that the family as a
unit can proceed in its development
30The Family Life Cycle
- Six stages
- Leaving Home Single Young Adults
- The Joining of Families Through Marriage The New
Couple - Families with Young Children
- Families with Adolescents
- Launching Children and Moving On
- Families in Later Life
31Six Stages of the Family Life Cycle
- Leaving Home Single Young Adults
- Accepting responsibility for oneself
- Differentiation
- Development of peer relationships
- Establishing oneself in work, financial
independence
32Six Stages of the Family Life Cycle
- 2) The Joining of Families Through Marriage
- The New Couple
- commitment to a new system
- formation of marital system
- realignment of relationships to include spouse
33Six Stages of the Family Life Cycle
- 3) Families with Young Children
- Accepting new members into the system
- Adjustment of marital system to allow for
children - Joining in child rearing, financial and household
tasks - Realignment of relationships to include parenting
and grandparenting roles
34Six Stages of the Family Life Cycle
- 4) Families with Adolescents
- Increasing boundaries to allow independence
- Shifting of relationships to allow adolescent to
move in and out of the system - Refocus on midlife marital and career issues
- Begin shift toward caretaking of older generation
35Six Stages of the Family Life Cycle
- 5) Launching Children and Moving On
- Accepting a multitude of exits from and entries
to family system - Renegotiation of marital system as a dyad
- Development of adult-adult relationships with
children - Realignment of relationships to include
- in-laws and grandchildren
36Six Stages of the Family Life Cycle
- 6) Families in Later Life
- Accepting shifting generational roles
- Maintaining functioning in face of decline
- Supporting older generation without
over-functioning for them - Dealing with loss of spouse, siblings, and
others preparing for death
37General Principles
- Development is stressful
- Stress is often the greatest at transition points
between stages - Developmental tasks that arent resolved will
create stress and cause further problems - Stress on top of a predisposition toward illness
may cause the illness to precipitate
38Stress and Diathesis
- Diathesis - disposition, the way things are
arranged, i.e. the way your body is made up - genetic predisposition
- What happens when you add a stress to a diathesis?
38
39Family Life Cycle and Mental Illness
- Imagine impact of serious mental illness on any
individual in a family system - How does impact vary with stage of family
- life cycle?
- How does impact vary depending on individuals
role in system? - How would other parts of system change to
accommodate (or if they didnt)?
40Flow of Stress Through the Family
- Carter McGoldrick (1999)
- Distinguish between horizontal stressors and
vertical stressors - Horizontal stressors include
- Developmental
- Unpredictable
- Historical events
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42Flow of Stress Through the Family
- Vertical stressors include the impact of past and
present issues at various levels of each system
at a point in time - System levels include
- Individual, immediate family, extended family,
community and larger society
43Flow of Stress Through the Family
- More stress on either axis will be greatly
compounded by stress on the other axis - When a horizontal stress intersects with a
vertical stress, there seems to be a huge leap in
anxiety in the system (Carter, 1978) - E.g. the onset of symptoms has been found to
correlate significantly with the addition or loss
of a family member (Hadley, 1974)
44Illness
- A defective gene may result in a defect in
neurotransmission, causing a disorder - Decreased Acetylcholine memory loss (dementia)
- Decreased Serotonin decreased mood (depression)
- Increased Dopamine delusions and hallucinations
- Decreased Dopamine movement disorders
(Parkinsons Disease) - Or a defective gene may not result in a defect,
not causing a disorder
45Stress - Diathesis
- Diathesis tendency
- Biological predisposition
- A tendency toward
- Decreased Acetylcholine memory loss (dementia)
- Decreased Serotonin decreased mood (depression)
- Increased Dopamine delusions and hallucinations
- Decreased Dopamine movement disorders
(Parkinsons Disease) - Add a stressor and a disorder may present
- Tendency overwhelming stress illness
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47Stress, Illness and Development
- Stress causes development
- Evolutionary truce -gt conflict -gt growth to
deal with change - Stress also may cause illness
- Diathesis stress illness
- What does illness do to development?
48Experiment
- Be the Smith Family
- psychodrama of a normal family life cycle
- Leaving home, young couple, new children,
adolescents, moving on, etc. - Psychodrama with an illness
- Mr. Smith carries a gene for voice
- The gene expresses the voice in Michael (son)
- What happens to development?
49Treatment
- Mental disorders have a biological basis and are
treatable by biological interventions, and - Psychotherapy is a biological intervention
- Changes in mood, thinking, or behaviour change
neurotransmitter function - Psychotherapy affects thinking, feeling and
behaving - Psychotherapy is a social activity that affects
psychological and biological function
50Lunch!
51In a nutshell
- mental health has oscillated between genes and
environment - Engel 1977 combined the two
- biopsychosocial
- deinstitutionalization of mentally ill in 1960s
- research on expressed emotion (EE) in 1970s EE
?relapse - help families without blaming them
51
52Implications
- education reduces anxiety reduces EE
- practical information on how to treat illness and
manage crises - research psychoeducation medication is more
effective than medication alone - but the trend of late has been a return to the
medical model (managed care?)
52
53Biopsychosocial Prayer
- God grant me the serenity to take or change my
medication as required - The courage to adopt new coping strategies that
lessen the effect of my illness on myself and on
my family - And the wisdom to know when to do which
53
54Partnership (Chapter 2)
- Biological vs. Emotional
- there is always an emotional overlay
- adaptation to biological illness - sometimes
problematic - Illness Interrupts Development
- educate families to respond to the mentally ill
person at the development stage at which they
find them at that moment - Tailor the Treatment to the Family
- the correct mix of psychoeducation and family
therapy
54
55The McMaster Modelof Family Functioning
56The McMaster Model
- Diagnosis of families requires a conceptual model
of family functioning - The MMFF is one attempt to provide a schema to
rate clinical observations and assist with
diagnosis
57The McMaster Model
- Started in 1962 with the Family Categories Schema
of Epstein, Sigal Rakoff - study of 110
non-clinical families - Revised several times to current presentation and
tested thoroughly for reliability and validity - Provides full spectrum of ratings from health to
pathology
58Assumptions Underlying the MMFF
- The parts of the family are interrelated
- One part of the family cannot be understood in
isolation from the rest of the system - Family functioning cannot be fully understood by
simply understanding - each of the parts
59Assumptions (contd)
- A familys structure and organization are
- important factors determining the behaviour of
family members - 5) Transactional patterns of the family system
are among the most important variables that shape
the behaviour of family members
60Six Dimensions of Family Functioning
- Problem Solving
- Communication
- Role Functioning
- Affective Responsiveness
- Affective Involvement
- Behaviour Control
61Problem Solving
- Refers to a familys ability to resolve problems
to a level that maintains effective family
functioning - Problems are divided into instrumental
- (, food, clothing, housing, etc.) and
affective - (emotional issues)
62Problem Solving
- Seven steps to problem solving
- Identify the problem
- Communicate it to the right people
- Develop a set of solutions
- Decide on one solution
- Carry out the action required
- Monitor to ensure action is carried out
- Evaluate the effectiveness
63Communication
- Defined as the exchange of information between
family members - Also divided into instrumental and affective
areas - Assessed on two dimensions
- Clear vs. masked
- Direct vs. indirect
- Focused more on verbal communication than
non-verbal
64Role Functioning
- Family roles are defined as the repetitive
patterns of behaviour by which family members
fulfill family functions - Five areas of function
- 1) Provision of resources
- 2) Nurturance and support
- 3) Adult sexual gratification
- 4) Personal development
- 5) Maintenance and management of the system
-
65Role Functioning
- Two other aspects of role functioning
- Role allocation how roles are assigned and
distributed (e.g. appropriate/inappropriate,
implicit/explicit, autocratic/democratic, shared
among all members) - Role accountability making sure that functions
are fulfilled reinforces commitment and
effectiveness
66Affective Responsiveness
- Defined as the ability to respond to a given
stimulus with the appropriate quality and
quantity of feelings - Two aspects to consider
- Responding with a full range of feelings
- Does the response match the stimulus and/or
context
67Affective Responsiveness
- Distinguish between welfare emotions and
emergency emotions - Welfare emotions include
- affection, warmth, tenderness, support, love,
consolation, happiness, and joy - Emergency emotions include
- Anger, fear, sadness, disappointment, and
depression
68Affective Involvement
- Defined as the extent to which the family shows
interest in and values the particular activities
and interests of individual family members - Ranges from a complete lack of involvement to
extreme involvement
69Affective Involvement
- Six types of involvement
- Lack of involvement
- Involvement devoid of feelings
- Narcissistic involvement
- Empathic involvement
- Over-involvement
- Symbiotic involvement
70Behaviour Control
- Defined as the pattern a family adopts for
handling behaviour in three areas - Physically dangerous situations
- Meeting and expressing psychobiological needs
(e.g. eating, sleeping, toileting, etc.) - Interpersonal socializing behaviour both between
people in the family and between family members
and outsiders
71Behaviour Control
- Four styles of behaviour control
- Rigid little room for negotiation
- Flexible reasonable, with room for negotiation
- Laissez-faire no standards
- Chaotic unpredictable, shifts between other
styles without predictability
72Case Study
- Watch movie clip
- Assess family using McMaster Rating Scale
73Break
74Classification of Disease
- ICD-9
- ICD-9-CM
- DSM-IV
- DSM-IV-TR
75Classification of Disease
- World Health Organization ICD-9
- International Classification of Diseases, 9th
revision - Mortality data only (ICD-9 is for dead people)
- ICD-9-CM
- International Classification of Diseases, 9th
revision, clinical modification - Based on ICD-9
- Official coding for illnesses in the United States
7676
7777
78Implications
- Disease Classification is internationally agreed
upon - It also forms the basis for billing from
governments and third parties
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80Classification of Mental Disorders
- Based on ICD-9-CM
- Called Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders (DSM) - Current edition is the Fourth Edition, published
in 1994 (DSM-IV) - A text revision was published in 2000 (DSM-IV-TR)
81ICD-9-CM Codes Found in the DSM
- MENTAL DISORDERS (290-319)
- DISEASES OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM AND SENSE ORGANS
(320-389) (sleep disorders, medication-induced
disorders) - DISEASES OF THE GENITOURINARY SYSTEM (580-629)
(sexual dysfunction) - SYMPTOMS, SIGNS, AND ILL-DEFINED CONDITIONS
(780-799) (Delirium NOS, breathing-related sleep
disorder, age-related cognitive decline,
encopresis with constipation, deferred diagnosis
GOK) - INJURY AND POISONING (800-999) (child neglect and
abuse)
82The V-Codes
- SUPPLEMENTARY CLASSIFICATION OF FACTORS
INFLUENCING HEALTH STATUS AND CONTACT WITH HEALTH
SERVICES (V01-V85) - non compliance with treatment spousal abuse
child abuse and neglect relational problems
occupational problem academic problem
acculturational problem bereavement religious
or spiritual problem malingering antisocial
83Definition of a Mental Disorder
- clinically significant behavioral or
psychological syndrome or pattern that occurs in
an individual and that is associated with present
distress (e.g., a painful symptom) or disability
(i.e., impairment in one or more important areas
of functioning) or with a significantly increased
risk of suffering death, pain, disability, or an
important loss of freedom.
84Mental Disorder, continued
- Must not be expectable and culturally sanctioned
response to a particular event (e.g. death of
loved one) - Must be a current manifestation of dysfunction
- Deviant behaviour and conflicts with society are
not included unless the deviance or conflict is a
symptom of individual dysfunction, as above
85Mental Disorder, continued
- The DSM-IV classifies disorders, not people
- Not a schizophrenic but an individual with
Schizophrenia (295) - Not an alcoholic but an individual with
Alcohol Dependence (303.90)
86How Diagnoses are Arranged
- Five Axes
- Axis I
- Clinical Disorders
- Other Conditions That May Be a Focus of Clinical
Attention (V-Codes) - Axis II
- Personality Disorders
- Mental Retardation
87How Diagnoses are Arranged
- Five Axes
- Axis III
- General Medical Conditions
- Axis IV
- Psychosocial and Environmental Problems (V-Codes,
also coded on Axis I if a primary concern) - Axis V
- Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF)
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90What MFTs need to know
- What you already know or are learning, i.e.
models of family therapy - Some familiarization with the DSM-IV in order to
understand the narrative under the label - From other sources, learn about etiology and
treatment - Then you can provide psychoeducation as well as
therapy
90
91Assignments
- In-class presentation (30)
- In-class quiz (10)
- Final paper (60)
91
92In-Class Presentation
- working in groups
- describe a mental health problem (DSM-IV)
- etiology (what causes it?)
- how does it impact family members?
- what are current, effective, family intervention
treatment models that help? - 22 minutes, 2 pages
- class discussion
92
93In-Class Presentation Topics
- October 2
- schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders
- psychotic couples
- bipolar disorder
- bipolar couples
- October 16
- personality disorders
- antisocial, borderline, narcissistic, dependent,
histrionic - couples histrionic-obsessive, narcissistic-border
line, dependent-narcissitic
93
94In-Class Presentation Topics
- October 30
- anxiety
- panic, agoraphobia, OCD
- PTSD, social anxiety, GAD
- extramarital affairs, natural disasters
- November 6
- depression (whats the use?)
- suicide, aging, brain injury, substance abuse
- special topics (eating disorders, ADHD)
94
95Quiz
- Attendance is necessary to pass the quiz
- It will be fun!
95
96Final Paper
- 60
- 15-20 pages
- grammar and style
- researched and critical
- creative
96
97Final Paper
- create a case study using a character and family
from a novel or film of your choice - provide a genogram and case history (make it up)
- describe the family as a system, identify the
patient, supply a diagnosis, etiology and
treatment plan (you are an MFT who is part of a
treatment team) - what medications will be used?
97
98Final Paper
- what is the likely progression of treatment?
- what further research needs to be done in this
area?
98
99Questions
99
100Charades
101Next Class is Next Friday
- In this room
- Schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders
- Bipolar affective disorder
- Student presentations
- Do the readings but dont let the stress make you
crazy!