Title: Motivational Interviewing
1Motivational Interviewing
- Mark Publicker, MD FASAM
- Medical Director
- Mercy Recovery Center
2Motivational Interviewing
- Grounded in a patient-centered approach
- A facilitative style of interviewing designed to
promote healthy behavior change - Humanistic, non-confrontational
- Solid research support for its effectiveness
3Motivational Interviewing
- Prochaska-Diclementes transtheoretical model of
the Stages of Change - Observational study of thousands of individuals
attempting weight loss and smoking cessation
without professional help
4Stages of Change Model
- Precontemplation
- Contemplation
- Determination (negotiation)
- Action
- Maintenance
- Extinction
- (Relapse)
5Stages of Change Model
- Precontemplation
- Absent conscious awareness of problem
- Defeat by failed prior attempts to change
- Perception that change would be too difficult to
contemplate
6Stages of Change Model
- Contemplation
- Ambivalence
- Feeling stuck
- Decisional balance
- Price of change vs price of maintaining the
status quo - Cognitive dissonance
7Stages of Change Model
- Determination
- Resolution of ambivalence
- Readiness to embark on behavioral change
- Menu of choices
8Stages of Change Model
- Action
- Daily implementation of new behavior(s)
- Requires conscious work
- Duration 6 to 18 months
- Example
- 90 in 90
9Stages of Change Model
- Maintenance
- New behavior becomes self-sustaining, carries its
own momentum - New behavior becomes second nature
- Attention to relapse risk
10Stages of Change Model
- Extinction
- Old behavior has low likelihood of recurring
(relapse)
11Assessment
- Conviction (importance) of behavior, of its
potential harm, and of perception of need for
change - Confidence Self-assessment of ability to change
behavior - Conviction x Confidence Commitment
12Assessment
- C
- O
- N
- V
- I
- C
- T
- I
- O
- N
- C O N F I D E N C E
13Assessment
- Ask
- On a scale of 1 to 10, how important is it that
you stop drinking, smoking, lose weight, etc? - On a scale of 1 to 10, how confident are you
that you could change your behavior if you wanted
to? - On a scale of 1 to 10, how ready are you to
change now?
14Motivational Interviewing
- Understanding change
- Change happens naturally
- Formal interventions produce changes that mirror
natural change - Behavioral change after interventions happens in
the first few sessions total dose doesnt make
much difference - The style of clinician intervention is a major
determinant of retention, adherence and outcome
15Motivational Interviewing
- Understanding change
- Empathetic style increases change
- Confrontational style impedes it
- People who believe that they are likely to change
to do. - People whose counselors believe they are likely
to change do so. - People told they are not expected to change
indeed do not
16Motivational Interviewing
- Understanding change
- What people say about change is important and
reflects what they will do - Arguments against change (resistance) produce
less change - Both can be influenced by counseling style
17Motivational Interviewing
- Empathy
- Accurate empathy reflection of patients
thoughts - Reflective listening techniques are the core of
MI - Empathic quotient of practitioner predicts
positive outcome - Ratio of reflective responses to direct questions
18Motivational Interviewing
- Match intervention to patients stage of change
- Precontemplation
- Assess conviction/confidence
- Provide feedback measurement (lab, etc) and
meaning of symptoms
19Motivational Interviewing
- Contemplation
- Ambivalence towards change
- Ambivalence is normal
- Acceptance facilitates change
- Avoid argumentation
- Roll with resistance
- Express empathy
- Augment discrepancy
20Motivational Interviewing
- Contemplation
- Patient defense of the status quo diminishes the
likelihood of change - Confrontation causes the patient to defend the
problem behavior - Help the patient become the change agent
21Motivational Interviewing
- Determination
- Provide a menu of choices
- Support self-efficacy
- Advice
22Motivational Interviewing
- Action
- Support self-efficacy
- Reinforce change
- Risk reduction
- Responsibility
23Motivational Interviewing
- Maintenance
- Relapse prevention/risk reduction
- Reinforce behaviors that resulted in change and
identify old behaviors that will compromise it
24Motivational Interviewing
- FRAMES
- F feedback
- R responsibility
- A advice
- M menu
- E empathy
- S self-efficacy
25Motivational Interviewing
- Reflective responses
- Simple reflection good response to resistance
- Example
- If my wife would just get off my back I would do
better. - Response Its really frustrating to have people
lecture you.
26Motivational Interviewing
- Amplified reflection
- My kids are always exaggerating my drinking.
- Response You really dont have any problem with
alcohol at all.
27Motivational Interviewing
- Double-sided reflection
- Emphasizes the sides of the dilemma
- On the one handand on the other hand
28Motivational Interviewing
- Research support
- Across a wide variety of medical and behavioral
disorders - i.e. Diabetes, weight loss, HIV, medication
adherence, smoking cessation, alcohol and drug
addiction
29Motivational Interviewing
- Larry Genitello, MD, Trauma Surgeon, Parkland
Memorial Hospital, Dallas - April 2005 Annals of Surgery Vol 241
- Alcohol interventions for trauma patients
treated in emergency departments and hospitals a
cost-benefit analysis
30Motivational Interviewing
- Brief alcohol interventions using MI in trauma
centers have been shown to reduce injury
recidivism - Estimate of 27 of injured patients are
candidates - Cost savings of an intervention is 330 per
patient, for cost saving of 3.81 for each 1.00
spent - If interventions were routine, national savings
of 1.82 billion annually
31Motivational Interviewing
- Summary
- Express empathy
- Avoid confrontation
- Roll with resistance
- Augment discrepancy in ambivalence
- Support self-efficacy