Title: Adapted from a presentation by Susan Gingerich
1IDDT Case Conference Family Interventions June
28, 2006
- Center for EBPsOhio SAMI CCOE Ohio SE CCOE
- Case Western Reserve UniversityCleveland, Ohio
2Overview of workshop
- 1000am1015am Review case vignette
- 1015am1030am Didactic lecture
- Benefits of family involvement in treatment
- Range of intervention options
- Practitioner roles
- 1030am1130am Panel Presentation
- Outpatient -Paula Clay Central Ohio MH Ctr
- Inpatient -TBD
- NAMI - Marci Dvorak/Toledo
- 1130am1150pm Large group discussion
- 1150am1200pm Summary remarks and evaluations
3Update
- 25 and 50 of clients with dual disorders live
with family members - Evidence showing that families will be involved
in programs - Evidence showing that comprehensive family
programs reduce relapse rates
4Research Results
- 11 controlled studies (Dx Schizophrenia)
- Family programs reduced relapse rates 25 to 75
- Programs improved functioning of all family
members
5Combined Results 11 Studies of Family programs, 2
yr cumulative relapse rates
6Inclusion of Family Involvement in Evidence-Based
Practices
- Family Psychoeducation
- Integrated Treatment for Dual Disorders
- Illness Management and Recovery
7What can families do to help?
- Contribute to a lower stress, more supportive
environment - Provide some of clients basic needs
- Provide information about disorders
- Communicate with treatment team
- Reinforce small steps towards improvement
- Encourage adherence to medication
- Discourage substance use abuse
8Why important to involve families of clients?
- 25 to 50 of those with DD live with family
members - help them meet basic needs
- Family stress
- negative effect on course of disorders
- Families interested in learning more about
disorders - Dual disorders increases risk of problems
- that can eventually lead to loss of family
support
9Additional reasons for involving families
- Loss of family support
- a major contributor to housing instability and
homelessness - Many families have substance abuse problems
- Family interventions
- among the most potent psychosocial interventions
currently available
10Several family models are helpful
- Behavioral Family Therapy (Falloon, et al, Mueser
Glynn, Miklowitz, NIMHs Treatment Strategies
in Schizophrenia research program) - Multifamily Psychoeducational Groups (McFarlane)
- Multifamily Support Groups (NIMHs TSS research
program) - Family-to-Family (Joyce Burland, adopted by NAMI)
11What do the different family models have in
common?
- Foster the development of all family members
- Educate families about disorders
- Improve communication skills
- Improve problem-solving skills
- Encourage family members to develop social
supports outside the family - Instill hope for the future
- Take the long-term perspective
12Provider Skill Sets
- Non-confrontational approach
- Active listening
- Gradual process of engagement
- Identifying and pursuing personal goals
- Providing information as needed
- Providing strategies skills as needed
- Recognition that change takes time
13IDDT Family Fidelity Items
- Outpatient Model
- Inpatient Adaptation
14Outpatient IDDT Fidelity ScaleItem T9 Family DD
Treatment
- Definition
- Clinicians always attempt to involve family/
support network to give DD psychoeducation and
promote collaboration with treatment team - based on number in contact with provider
15Probe
- How many clients in contact w/ family or social
support weekly? - Community based estimates suggest about 60 of DD
patients have weekly contact with their families - Of those, how many is your program in contact
with? - Reasons not? What happens then?
- How are clients engaged to involve family/social
support members? - How many receive family tx services? Psychoed?
- Outreach to refusals?
16Inpatient IDDT Fidelity Scale AdaptationItem 22
Interventions for DD Patients Families
- Definition
- Family/social support intervention by
professionals is designed to educate family
members about DD, help reduce stress in the
family, and to promote collaboration with the
treatment team. This includes - family involvement in the patients treatment
team - phone contact with the hospital social worker
- referral of the family to community supports
- referral of the family to family counseling, and
receipt of services.
17Probe
- How many patients are in contact with family
members (or significant others) on a weekly
basis? - Estimates suggest about 60 of DD patients have
weekly contact with their families - Of those patients, how many families have
received family services? - How are clients engaged to involve family/social
support members? - Do you do outreach to families? How?
- What services are usually provided to families?
18Stages of Recovery for Families
- Engagement
- Persuasion
- Active treatment
- Relapse prevention
- Mueser, et al, Integrated Treatment for Dual
Disorders, page 203.
19Engagement
- Family members are in contact with a
practitioner and are in the process of developing
a working alliance.
20Persuasion
-
- Family members have begun to discuss the
clients substance abuse and may be receptive to
education about mental illness and the effects of
substance abuse.
21Active Treatment
- Family members are engaged in treatment. They
are learning information, strategies and skills
to help person with managing mental illness and
reducing their substance abuse.
22Relapse prevention
- The client has achieved a reduction in
substance use (or abstinence) for at least 6
months and the family members continue to offer
support and practical assistance.
23Families/Significant Others Should Receive
- Outreach
- Education about dual disorders
- Coping skills for problems related to the
clients mental illness and substance use - Collaboration with the treatment team
- Support
24Outreach
- Ask each client who their family members and
significant others are - Ask each client whom he or she spends time with
and/or turns to for support - Ask each client who many hours he or she spends
with significant other per week - Especially focus on those who have weekly contact
25Outreach - contd
- Ask for permission to contact significant others
to let them know of the positive step client is
taking in being involved in treatment or - to offer assistance to the significant others
based on their expressed needs - Call significant other, give info about program,
ask if he or she has questions, offer to send
written material - Alert significant others to relevant resources,
such as NAMI
26Basic Education about Mental Illness
- Basic Facts about Mental Illness
- Medications
- The Stress Vulnerability Model
- Basic Facts about Alcohol and Drug Use
- Role of the Family
- Keys to Good Communication
- handouts available in Mueser, et al., 2003
27Basic Education about Substance Use
- Alcohol and Drugs Motives and Consequences
- Treatment of Dual Disorders
- Infectious Diseases
- handouts available in Mueser, et al., 2003
28Coping Skills Training
- Strategies for lowering stress in the environment
- Coping with symptoms of mental illness (such as
hallucinations, delusions) - Modifying stressful communication styles
- Taking a problem-solving approach
- Strategies for common problems
- Setting limits
- Suggestions in Mueser Glynn, 1999 Mueser, et
al, 2003, Mueser Gingerich, in press -
29Collaboration with Treatment Team
- Frequent communication
- Ongoing interactive education about mental
illness, substance abuse, and treatment
recommendations - Invitations to participate in meetings
-
- Suggestions in Mueser, et al, 2003, pages
195-204 -
30Support
- Reinforcing positive actions
- Offering hope
- Expressing interest in their well-being
- Helping solve variety of problems
- Helping family members/significant others to know
that they are not to blame and not alone in their
situation - Suggestions in Mueser, et al, 2003, pages
195-204 -
31Some Families Benefit from More Systematic
Intervention
- Behavioral Family Therapy
- Multifamily Support Group
- Multifamily Psychoeducation Group
32Behavioral Family Therapy (BFT)
- Single family model
- Interested in improving quality of life for all
family members - Incorporates psychoeducation, communication
skills training and problem-solving training - Can be tailored to reach a variety of families
- Can be provided at home or agency
33Books Describing Behavioral Family Therapy in
Detail
- Mueser Glynn, Behavioral Family Therapy for
Psychiatric Disorders, 1999. Includes
reproducible forms and handouts. - Mueser et al, Family Collaboration and
Behavioral Family Therapy in Integrated
Treatment for Dual Disorders, pages 195-235.
Includes reproducible forms and handouts.
34Summary of BFT Model
- Engagement/connecting
- Assessment/establishing personal goals
- Psychoeducation (6 - 8 sessions)
- Communication training as needed (4 - 8 sessions)
- Problem-solving training (5 -15 sessions)
- Gradual decline of sessions/termination
35Communication skills - examples
- Active listening
- Expressing positive feelings
- Making positive requests
- Expressing negative (unpleasant) feelings
- Compromise and negotiation
- Requesting a time-out
36Problem-solving Examples of topics for families
to work on
- Identify alternative socialization outlets
- Responding to offers to use substances
- Determining strategies for dealing with
persistent symptoms - Exploring alternative recreational activities
- Finding work or other meaningful activities
37Problem-Solving Steps
- 1. Define the problem
- 2. Brainstorm possible solutions
- 3. Evaluate solutions (pros cons)
- 4. Choose the best solution or combination
- 5. Plan how to implement the solution
- 6. Follow up the implementation
- See Mueser et al, page 463
38Interventions
39Multifamily Groups
- Multifamily Groups teach families knowledge and
skills similar to content of BFT - Provide social support, opportunities to learn
from others experience, and hear other
suggestions for solving problems
40Two Main Models of Multifamily Groups
- Multifamily Support Group (NIMH Treatment
Strategies In Schizophrenia description in
Mueser, et al) - Psychoeducational Multifamily Group (W.
McFarlane)
41Interventions
- Multifamily Support Groups
42Multifamily Support Group
- Time unlimited
- Include client
- Conducted monthly (or every two weeks)
- 60 - 90 minute sessions
- Scheduled in the evening
- Start with 3-5 families (6-10 individuals)
- Avoid groups larger than 25
43Multifamily Support Groups - contd
- Clients with different diagnoses can be included
- If necessary, client can attend without family
and vice versa - Co-leaders highly recommended
- Educational presentation for each session
- Send out reminders
- See description in Mueser, et al, 2003. P.
227-235
44Stages of Multifamily Support Groups
- Engagement (phone calls, family session)
- Multifamily group sessions
45Interventions
-
- Psychoeducational
- Multifamily Groups
46Psychoeducational Multifamily Groups
- Time-unlimited
- Include the client
- Conducted every two weeks (sometimes declining to
monthly sessions) - Single diagnosis, closed groups recommended
- If necessary, family members can attend without
the client and vice versa - Co-leaders highly recommended
- Send out reminders
- See MacFarlane Dixon Toolkit. See
MacFarlane, 2002.
47Advantages of different models of family
intervention
48Combining BFT and Multifamily Groups
- Successful pilot study done by Mueser and Fox
(2002) - Families received BFT as a single family
- Families attended monthly sessions of multifamily
support group - Data on six families all clients made progress
in dual disorder treatment
49Interventions
50Suggestions for Structure for Providing Family
Intervention
- Each team needs at least two family clinicians
- Each team needs a family supervisor/coordinator
or shares one with with another team or with the
rest of their agency - Time needs to be protected
51Family Clinicians
- Are trained to engage families,
- conduct individual family sessions,
- and lead multifamily groups.
- Work with at least 2-4 individual families in the
first year of implementation - Start a multifamily group in the first year of
implementation
52Family clinicians - contd
- Provide ideas and suggestions to teammates about
working with families of clients - Identify families who would benefit from more
systematic intervention - Need protected time to work with families (3-5
hours) and - receive weekly supervision (in a group with other
family clinicians)
53Family Supervisor
- Same training as family clinicians
- Expected to work with 1-2 families individually
and start a multiple family group - Provides weekly supervision to family clinicians
(up to 6 in a group) - Monitors the delivery of family services meets
regularly with team leader or agency director - Needs protected time for working with families,
providing supervision, and monitoring services
(3-5 hours, unless supervising more than one
group of clinicians)
54Team Leader or Agency Director
- Attends some of the training
- Demonstrates support of family work on the team
or within the agency - Meets regularly with Family Supervisor/Coordinator
- Troubleshoots obstacles to providing family work
55Option Family Services Coordinator for an
Entire Agency
- Identifies and trains clinicians in family work
- Works with families
- Supervises family clinicians (in groups of up to
6) - Monitors the delivery of family services
- Develops, implements, oversees family programs
- Works with a family advocate as a liaison with
NAMI - Participates in continuing education activities
- Has approximately 10 hours designated for these
responsibilities
56Implementation Questions
- What aspects of your organizations culture,
experience and skills would be particularly
advantageous to working with families? - How many family clinicians would there be?
- Who would be the family clinicians?
- Who would be the Family Supervisor/Coordinator?
- How would you get the word out to all staff?
Families/Significant Others?
57Implementation Questions - contd
- How many clients have regular contact with
families/significant others? - Which clients would you approach first?
- How would the family clinicians have protected
time for working with families? - How would the family supervisor/coordinator have
protected time? - How would your administration support the overall
implementation of family work?
58Setting Goals
- Time frame What How Who
- 3 month
- 6 month
- 12 month
59Identify
- Obstacles to implementation
- Strategies to overcome those obstacles
60Contacts
- Christina Delos Reyes, MD
- Patrick E. Boyle, MSSA, LISW, LICDC
- Center for Evidence Based Practices at Case
- Ohio SAMI CCOE - Ohio SE CCOE
- Behavioral Healthcare
- 1756 Sagamore Road
- Cottage 7, Room 304
- Northfield, OH 44067-1086
- Ph 330-468-8663 Fax 330-468-8723
- Patrick.boyle_at_case.edu
- www.ohiosamiccoe.case.edu