Title: Infant Parent Psychotherapy: Clinical Understanding
1Infant / Parent Psychotherapy Clinical
Understanding Treatment
- Natalie Roth, Ph.D.
- Jessica Singleton, Ph.D.
2Choose Your Approach Based on Need
- Emotional Support (look, listen, acknowledge, and
show compassion) - Concrete Resources (food, housing, clothing,
medical care) - Developmental Guidance (basic child care routines
and safety needs, observation of the babys
competencies, and anticipation of new milestones) - Advocacy (speak for those who cannot)
- Infant-Parent Psychotherapy (when support and
guidance are not adequate) - Weatherston, D.J. (1995). She does love me,
doesnt she? Zero to Three, February/March, p. 8
3Infant-Parent PsychotherapyAn Overview of
Therapeutic Approaches
- Infant-Parent Psychotherapy
- Psychoanalytically based
- Both parents and infant are the patient
- Corrective attachment experience of the
therapeutic relationship - Interpretation (transference, projective
identification) - Increasing parents self-esteem, knowledge, and
skills
4Infant-Parent PsychotherapyAn Overview of
Therapeutic Approaches
- Focusing on Infant Behavior
- (Terry Brazelton and colleagues)
- As part of an evaluation process (pediatric
examination Neonatal Behavioral Assessment
Scale, Bailey) - Infants response to the test situation initiates
discussion - Examples Overstimulated baby
- At-risk attachment situations
-
5Infant-Parent PsychotherapyAn Overview of
Therapeutic Approaches
- Interaction Guidance
- Focus on mothers behavior
- Establish therapeutic alliance (home visits,
education, advice, practical help, support, and
intervening with other agencies) - Positive reinforcement of maternal behaviors that
are good (videotaping and replay, then in vivo
interaction) - Alternate Entire Network of Family Interactions
(the family triad)
6Infant-Parent PsychotherapyAn Overview of
Therapeutic Approaches
- Watch, Wait Wonder
- (Elisabeth Muir)
- Parent-child interaction is port of entry
- Parent-child play time parent follows childs
lead - Discussion with therapist therapist follows
parents lead
7Infant-Parent PsychotherapyAn Overview of
Therapeutic Approaches
- Floortime
- (Stanley Greenspan)
- Technique and philosophy centered on developing
meaningful adult/child interactions to promote
cognitive and social/emotional development - 5 Step technique
- Observation
- Approach- Open the Circle of Communication
- Follow the Childs Lead
- Extend and Expand
- Child Closes the Circle
-
8Meta-Analysis 101
- A study of studies
- Usefulness
- Cohens d
- Effect size interpretation
- Small .00-.32
- Moderate .33-.55
- Large .56
9The Current Meta-Analysis
- Models Identified
- Psychodynamic
- Educational
- Infant Massage
- Eclectic
- Types of Practitioners
- Psychologists
- Psychiatrists
- Social Workers
- Nurses
- Paraprofessionals
10Outcome Measures
- Ainsworth Maternal Sensitivity Scale (Ainsworth,
Blehar, Waters, Wall, 1978) - AMBIANCE (Bronfman, Parsons, Lyons-Ruth, 1999)
- Chatoor Mother/Infant/Toddler Play Scale
(Chatoor, 1986 Chatoor, Menville, Getson,
ODonnell, 1988)
- Crittenden Experimental Index of adult-infant
Relations (Crittenden, 1981) - Home Observation for Measurement of the
Environment (Bradley Caldwell, 1977) - Klein-Briggs Observation of Communicative
Interaction Scales (Klein Briggs, 1987)
11Outcome Measures
- Mother-child relationship evaluation (Roth, 1961)
- NCAST Feeding and Teaching Scales (Barnard, 1989)
- Parent/Caregiver Involvement Scale (Farren et
al., 1986) - Parental Attitudes Toward Childrearing (Goldberg
Easterbrooks, 1984)
- Parenting Sense of Competence Scale (Johnston
Mash, 1991) - Parenting Stress Index(Abidin, 1990)
- Quality of Parental Support and Parent-Child
Interaction Observations (Erickson et al., 1985) - Relationship Survey (Simpson, Rholes, Nelligan,
1992)
12(No Transcript)
13Moderators Large Effect Sizes
- Large ES
- Mental Health Therapists
- Psychodynamic, Interaction Guidance, Massage,
Eclectic Models - Brief to moderate length
- Hispanic and White clients
- Parents with ltHS education
14Infant-Parent Psychotherapy
- Attachment Perspective/Relationship based
- Selma Fraiberg/Alicia Lieberman
- Ghosts in the Nursery
- Child-parent psychotherapy
15Infant-Parent PsychotherapyPractitioners
- Psychologists
- Psychiatrists
- Social workers
- Family therapists
- Nurses
- Child development specialists
- Occupational therapists
16Infant-Parent Psychotherapy Major Tenants
- The attachment system is the organizer of
childrens responses - Problems in infancy are addressed in the context
of the attachment relationship - Transactional development
17Infant-Parent PsychotherapyAssessment
- Observations include
- Parent-child interaction
- Child-examiner interaction
- Multiple settings/times
- Developmental history
- Parent report of problem
- Parents history
- Cultural issues
18Infant-Parent Psychotherapy Key Concepts
- Kitchen therapy
- Techniques
- Behavior-based strategies
- Play
- Verbal interpretation
- Ports of Entry
- Four Modalities
- Concrete Assistance
- Emotional Support
- Developmental Guidance
- Psychodynamic Psychotherapy
19Infant-Parent PsychotherapyPorts of Entry
- The childs behavior
- The parent-child interaction
- The childs representations
- Parental Representations
- Intertwined parent-child representations
- Parent-therapist relationship
20Infant-Parent PsychotherapyConcrete Assistance
- Locating resources
- Providing transportation
- Advocacy
- Completing forms
21Infant-Parent PsychotherapyEmotional Support
- Look, Listen, Acknowledge, and Show Empathy
- Awareness of the parents and childs messages
22Infant-Parent PsychotherapyDevelopmental Guidance
- Non-didactic
- Speak through the child
- Interpret
- She loves it when you hold her like that.
- I wonder what he is saying to us now.
- Encourage play
- Model
- Encourage eye contact, smiling, waiting,
following - Offer suggestions
23Infant-Parent PsychotherapyPsychodynamic
Psychotherapy
- Understanding the parents reaction to their
child in the context of their personal history - Include the infant
- What was it like for you when he follows you
around? - How was your relationship with your parent?
24Infant-Parent PsychotherapyReview
- Emotional support, warmth, and empathy
- The infant is always present
- Point out accomplishments
- Provide parent education
- Be on time for all sessions
- Help them increase their feeling vocabulary
- Group settings are possible
- Time issues
- Provide opportunities for positive experiences
- Always remain open, curious, and reflective
25Infant-Parent PsychotherapyAn Overview of
Therapeutic Approaches
- Parent-Child Interaction Therapy
- (Sheila Eyberg)
- Combining play therapy and behavioral techniques
- More to come
26Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)
- Developed by Sheila Eyberg, Ph.D. (University of
Florida) - For children ages 2-6 with a range of behavioral,
emotional, and family problems (e.g. difficult
termperament, hyperactivity, faulty social
information processing, genetic difficulties)
27Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)
- Manualized (Hembree-Kigin, T. L., McNeil, C. B.
(1995). Parent-Child Interaction Therapy. New
York Plenum) - Based on attachment theory and social learning
theory - Short-Term (10-16, 1 hr. sessions)
- Assessment-driven
- Empirically supported
- Divided into two phases
- Child-Directed Interaction (CDI)
- Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
28Theorectical Foundations of PCIT
- Baumrinds Parenting Styles
- Authoritarian (high demandingness, low warmth)
- Permissive (high warmth, low demandingness)
- Authoritative (high warmth, high demandingness)
- Nurturance and firm limits are both necessary for
healthy outcomes
29Theorectical Foundations of PCIT
- Attachment Theory
- Focus of CDI is to restructure parent-child
relationship to provide a secure attachment - Asserts that sensitive and responsive parenting
provides the foundation for the childs knowledge
that he/she will be responded to when necessary. - Results in more effective emotional and
behavioral regulation
30Social Learning Theory
- Patterson et. al (1991)
- Coercion Theory
- Behavior problems are inadvertently established
or maintained by dysfunctional parent-child
interactions - Both child and parent actively engage in the
continuation of the cycle, which is maintained
through negative reinforcement
31Patterson et. al (1991) Coercion Theory
Increase in Problem Behaviors
Negative Reinforcement Increases Intensity of
Behavior Over Time
Withdrawal of Parental Request
Child Problem Behaviors (Arguing, Aggression)
32Patterson et. al (1991) Coercion Theory
Increase in Negative Behaviors
Negative Reinforcement Increases Intensity of
Behavior Over Time
Momentary Compliance from Child
Negative Parent Behaviors (Yelling)
33Patterson et. al (1991) Coercion Theory
- Parent of children with externalizing behaviors
have been found to be - Power-assertive (Authoritative) and
- Lax (Permissive)
- Its this combination of intermittent
reinforcement that produces such a strong
reinforcement system
34Structure of PCIT
- Child Directed Interaction (CDI)
- Teaching Session
- One Hour Session
- Parents alone
- Presentation of skills
- Rules
- Reasons
- Examples
- Modeling/demonstration
- Role-play with parents
35Structure of PCIT
- CDI
- Dont Rules
- Follow the Childs Lead
- No Commands (attempt to lead risk negative
interaction) - No Questions (are often hidden commands, take
lead from the child, can suggest disapproval, can
suggest not listening) - No Criticism (Points out mistakes rather than
correcting them, lowers self-esteem, creates
unpleasant interaction)
36Structure of PCIT
- CDI
- Do Rules
- PRIDE
- Praise (Labeled Thanks you for using your
indoor voice) - Reflect (Allows child to lead shows that parent
is listening shows that parent understand
improves speech) - Imitate (Lets the child lead teaches parent
how to play, show approval of childs activity
teaches child how to play with others) - Describe (sportscaster, child leads, child
knows youre paying attention, shows interest and
approval, teaches vocabulary, holds childs
attention to the task) - Enthusiasm! (Lets the child know you enjoy
being with them, makes the play more fun, adds
quality of warmth)
37Structure of PCIT
- CDI
- IGNORE (talking to the wall) annoying, obnoxious
behavior use STRATEGIC ATTENTION to increase
desireable behavior - STOP THE PLAY for dangerous or desctructive
behavior and use safe discipline technique
38Structure of PCIT
- CDI
- Suggested Toys
- Creative constructional toys (blocks, Mr. Potato
Head, Toy farm w/ animals, crayons and paper) - Avoid
- toys that encourage rough play
- toys that lead to aggressive play
- toys that require limit setting (scissors)
- toys that discourage conversation
- toys that lead parent or child to pretend they
are someone else
39Structure of PCIT
- Coaching is the primary method of parent training
(bug in the ear) - allows immediate feedback
- prevents miscommunication
- provides support
- enables therapist to calm and reassure parent if
needed - provides opportunity for reframing parent
attributions
40Structure of PCIT
- Common Coaching Statements
- Labeled Praises
- Good ignoring!
- Gentle correctives
- Oops, a question.
- Directives
- Can you reflect that?
- Observations
- He quiets down when you talk softly like that.
41Structure of PCIT
- Weekly Coaching Sessions
- Homework
- Special Time
- 5-10 Minutes/day
- Reduces resistance
- Able to sustain quality
- Hart to concentrate for longer
- Reduces likelihood of problems
- Doesnt have to be rigid
- Not contingent on behavior
- Ending Im going to pick up the toys now. You
can help me if you want
42Structure of PCIT
- Mastery of CDI
- DPICS (Descriptive Parent Child Interaction)
coding for 5 minutes - 10 labeled praises
- 10 behavior descriptions
- 10 reflections
- No commands, questions, or criticisms
43Structure of PCIT
- Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
- Concentrates on
- Issuing clear commands
- Providing consistent consequences for both
compliance (labeled praise) and noncompliance
(time-out procedure)
44Structure of PCIT
- PDI
- Effective Commands
- Direct (telling, not asking)
- Positive (what to DO, not stop doing)
- Single (one at a time)
- Specific (not vague)
- Age-appropriate
- Given in a normal tone of voice
- Used only when really necessary
- Explained after obeyed
45Structure of PCIT
No Opportunity
Obey
Disobey
Labeled Praise
Whoops! (Start Over)
Back to Play!
46Structure of PCIT
- If you dont (original command), youll have to
do to the time out chair
Obey
Disobey
Labeled Praise
Back to Play!
47Structure of PCIT
- The Chair
- Child stays on chair 3 min. plus 5 seconds quiet
Are you ready to (obey original command?)
Doesnt Stay on Chair
Obey
Praise
48Structure of PCIT
You got off the chair before I said you could.
If you get off again, youll go to the Time Out
Room
Child gets off again
Back to Chair
Child goes to time out room 1 minute of quiet
49Structure of PCIT
- The Chair
- Child stays on chair 3 min. plus 5 seconds quiet
Are you ready to (obey original command?)
Obey
Acknowledge
50Structure of PCIT
- Command
-
- Obey
-
- Praise
-
- Back to Play!!
51Structure of PCIT
- House Rules
- Standing Commands
- No aggressive behavior
- No destructive behavior
- Procedure
- Label behavior for child
- Explain rule to child
- No chair warnings
- Its over when time is up
52Structure of PCIT
- Public Misbehavior
- Procedures (time out can travel)
- Make plan before leaving home
- Describe desired behavior
- Take along time out chair (towel)
- Discuss back-ups
53Structure of PCIT
- Last session
- Posttreatment-evaluation
- Discussion and Feedback
- Perception of reasons for change
- review measures
- show pre and post video tape
- Address remaining concerns
- Schedule boosters