Title: THE ARISE MODEL
1THE ARISE MODEL Invitational Intervention
Theory and Outcome Research
James Garrett, LCSW, CAI, BRI II Linking Human
Systems LINC Foundation LinkingHumanSystems.com
garrett_at_linkinghumansystems.com 877-229-5462
2DEFINITION OF INTERVENTION
- Intervention is a desire by family, friends,
employers, and other members of the support
network actively to assist someone to change
unacceptable behavior - It is a pre-treatment engagement approach to
assist the person struggling with addictive
behavior to enter treatment or self-help
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4TREATMENT ENGAGEMENT
- A VERY SMALL PROPORTION OF PEOPLE WITH DRUG
DEPENDENCY OR ABUSE ARE ENGAGED IN TREATMENT OR
SELF-HELP - NATHAN (1990) ESTIMATED 5
- FRANCES ET AL. (1989) ESTIMATED 10
- KESSLER ET AL. (1994) ESTIMATED 8
5The Vast Majority (90-95) of Addicted
Individuals Are Never in Treatment Or Self-Help
- Untreated chemical dependency annually costs the
USA 50,000 deaths and over 165 billion in - Medical care
- Unemployment
- Criminal justice system involvement
- Addiction treatment
- (Brady, 95 Klaidman, 96 Rice, 94)
- Chemical dependency treatment saves 7.00 for
every 1.00 invested (Berlant et al., 94
Gerstein et al., 94 Langenbucher, 94, replicated
2006) - In Canada 40 billion in costs and treatment
saves 11.00 for each 1.00 - CSAT (2005) 22 million Addicted Individuals
needed treatment and only 3 million received
treatment during the year 2005
6A Relational Intervention Sequence for Engagement
(ARISE)
A Three-Level, Graduated Continuum of
Intervention To Engage Addicted Individuals in
Treatment
- Goal Getting the Addicted Individual into
treatment - Principle Stop at the first level that works
- Process
- Applies the least amount of time and effort
- Responds to the love, fear, worry, and guilt of
those living with the addiction - Is designed to be cost and time effective
7- Level I The First Call
- Someone calls or contacts an agency concerned
about a Addicted Individual - The call is used to coach the caller on getting
the Addicted Individual into treatment - The First Caller (Concerned Other) is coached to
mobilize members of the support system to get the
Addicted Individual into treatment - Level II Strength in Numbers
- Family, friends, and Concerned Others meet to
plan bringing the Addicted Individual into
treatment if Addicted Individual is not engaged
after Stage I - Level III The Formal ARISE Intervention
- If needed Network proceeds to a supportive,
formal Intervention meeting
8ARISE
- Is a collaborative process. From the initial
invitation extended, the process conveys respect
and establishes the ground rules for openness and
no secrecy from the very beginning - Acknowledges that mistrust will be a major issue
and assures the addicted individual that s/he can
trust family/friends and does not have to trust
the Interventionist
9ARISE
- Allows the Interventionist to say, We will all
meet for the first time together, and Let the
addicted person know s/he is only being asked to
come to this one meeting to express his/her
opinion - Addresses the addicted individuals biggest
complaint, fear, and source of defensivenessIm
being tricked, Youre going behind my back, or
Youre ambushing me and doing this as a
surprise
10ARISE
- Views the First Caller/Concerned Other/Family
Link as a valuable necessary resource in getting
the AI into treatment, rather than viewing
him/her as co-dependent or enabling - Encourages the Intervention Network to make a
solid commitment to the process, even if the AI
refuses to come to the First Meeting
11ARISE
- Right from the 1st Call, acknowledges the power
and destructiveness of addiction and recognizes
how the addicted individual needs support
encouragement to begin a process of recovery - Breaks the isolation and private struggle of
both AI and family preventing any further loss - Sets the groundwork for the Intervention Network
to be used as a Board of Directors for
consensus decision making
12ARISE
- Establishes roles and clarification of the
process and asserts the initial rule that the
group is going to meet regardless of whether the
addicted individual attends meetings - Empowers the family, builds on family competence,
resilience and strengths, offering hope and
reducing blame, shame and guilt - Acknowledges boundaries for the family, the
Intervention Network, and the AI - Sets the scene for the initial and future
meetingsthe Invitational Intervention Continuum
13ARISE
- Acknowledges the importance of choice at every
step in the Intervention - Offers the AI options, and thereby avoids the
rebellious/defiant response set up by telling
him/her what to do - Removes the power of the addictive disease from
controlling and defining the family
14Addicted Individuals Have frequent contact With
their families of origin
- 26 of 28 reports indicate drug addicts are in
regular contact with one or more parent (Stanton
and Shadish, 97) - 90 of 22 year-old New York narcotic addicts
returning from treatment lived with mother, if
alive (Vaillant, 66) - 86 of 25-30 year old opioid addicts saw one or
both parents face-to-face at least weekly
(Stanton, 82)
15Percentage of Subjects in Daily Telephone Contact
With One or More Parent
Addicts
Heroin
Addicts
Polydrug
Non- addictss
(Purzel and Lamon, 79)
16DRUG ABUSERS LIVING WITH PARENTS
17Relationship of Addiction toLoss and Trauma
18Loss and Addiction
- Onset of addiction is almost always connected to
- death of a parent, grandparent, spouse or
significant friend, - natural or human-made disaster,
immigration/refugee experience, or war - Substance use
- numbs the sadness, loss, anger, guilt and
loneliness - distracts from grief in other members of the
family
19Effects of Trauma and Loss
- Oklahoma City
- For every one person directly impacted by the
Oklahoma City Bombing, 10 years later five showed
symptoms of stress or PTSD - US War Veterans
- Demonstrate very similar statistics
20Effects of Trauma and Loss contd.
- Taiwan
- A series of major earthquakes and floods after
1999 resulted in a 60 increase in rates of
depression and suicide - New York City
- 1 year after 9/11, 30 increase in abuse of drugs
and alcohol - Katrina
- 1 year after the disaster, 63 increase in abuse
of drugs and alcohol
21More Vietnam veterans have died from addiction
and/or suicide than were lost during the Vietnam
conflict
- Deaths of Vietnam veterans
- during Vietnam conflict 58,000
- since Vietnam conflict from addiction/suicide
62,000
22Trauma and AddictionHistorical Trauma
- Trail of Tears (1830s)
- 18,000 Cherokee and Muskogee Indians forced to
move (4,000 deaths) - Long Walk (1863)
- 8,000 Apache and Dine incarcerated at Ft. Sumner,
NM resulting in over 2,000 deaths
23Trauma and AddictionHistorical Trauma contd.
- Holocaust (1938-1945)
- Approximately 6 million Jews killed in the
Holocaust -
- Armenian Genocide (1900-1923)
- 3.5 to 4.5 million Armenians, Greeks, Nastorians
and other Christians killed by various Turkish
regimes
24Trauma and AddictionIndividual Trauma
- 60 of the women in AA report a history of
sexual abuse - 30 of the men in AA report a history of sexual
abuse
25Family Resilience
26Transitional Family Therapy
27Philosophy of Transitional Family Therapy
- Families are intrinsically healthy and competent
- People and environments are constantly in
transition - Individuals, families and communities will find
and utilize their competence - Competence is unavailable when individuals and
families are cut off from their extended families
and natural support systems - To access competence, mobilize and extend natural
support system - Eliminate the we/they dichotomy and maintain
connection to family and culture of origin
28Principles of Transitional Family Therapy
- Empower family and natural support system
- Remove the blame, reduce shame and guilt
- Help the elders (parents and grandparents) take
charge - Identify natural resources
- Identify patterns across generations
29Principles of Transitional Family Therapy
- Engage the entire system
- Be sensitive to issues of culture, gender and
spirituality - Expose and resolve secrets
- Consider medical problems
- Reconnect the transitional pathway
- Assure continuity of family values, mission and
heritage
30Principles of Transitional Family Therapy
- Determine why now?
- Understand impact of the time compression/life
cycle reversal - Deal with unresolved transitions, grief, loss and
abuse - Identify strengths, themes and resources across
generations
31Principles of Transitional Family Therapy
-
- Establish a balance of agency and communion
- Achieve co-operation across all systems and the
network - Refer and collaborate whenever necessary
- Delegate
- Reconnection, continuity and recalibration
32Impact of Stressors/Change on Family Functioning
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34SUMMARY OF ARISE PRINCIPLES (based on
Transitional Family Theory)
- Families are intrinsically healthy and when
things go wrong have the drive to heal - Families are resilient and can be guided to
access strengths that have allowed them to
flourish in the past and successfully address
problems and achieve goal - Families are more powerful than professionals
- The end is in the beginning (addiction is related
to trauma and unresolved loss and stops when
families heal and resolve the trauma and loss) - Respect the symptomsymptomatic behavior it is
adaptive and initially designed to solve a
problem (symptoms are manifestations of a healing
process)
35Invitational Intervention
36Why an Invitation?
- Studies in 1980s showed that 8 of every 10
families calling for a Johnson Intervention
refused to follow through (Garrett et al.) - 100 of women in Australian study refused to do a
Johnson Intervention when offered (Barber
Gilbertson)
37ARISE
- Views families as being intrinsically healthy
- Empowers the family, builds on family competence,
resilience and strengths, offers hope and
reduction of blame, shame and guilt - Is a collaborative process from the initial
invitation
38ARISE
- Conveys respect and establishes the ground rules
for openness and no secrecy from the very
beginning - Views the First Caller/Concerned Other as a
valuable necessary resource in getting the AI
into treatment, rather than as co-dependent or
enabling - Helps Intervention Network understand the power
and destructiveness of addiction and the need for
support and encouragement for the AI to begin the
recovery process
39ARISE
- Breaks the isolation and private struggle of
both AI and family - Sets the groundwork for the Intervention Network
to be used as a Board of Directors for
consensus decision making - Identifies and builds on the motivation within
the family to heal from unresolved grief and/or
trauma
40ARISE
- Acknowledges the importance of choice at every
step in the Intervention - Acknowledges the importance of choice at every
step in the Intervention - Offers the AI options, and thereby avoids the
rebellious/defiant response set up by telling
him/her what to do - Removes the power of the addictive disease from
controlling and defining the family
41Family Motivation to Change
42Family Motivation to Change is the combined
forces operating within a family guiding it
toward maintaining survival and healthy
functioning in the face of serious threat, and
toward healing when that threat is removed.
43FAMILY MOTIVATION TO CHANGE THE PROCESS IN
ACTION
- First Protecting and then Healing the Family
- Completing the Transitional Task for Peace of
Mind. - Getting a Loved One Back
- Preventing Further Loss
44FAMILY MOTIVATION TO CHANGE
- Recovery Messages
- Breaking the Inter-Generational Cycle of
Alcoholism - The Power of Wanting to Get a Loved One Back
- Preventing More Loss
45Using ARISE for Other Problems
- Compulsive Gambling
- Eating Disorders
- Psychiatric Disorders
- Sexual Addiction
- Internet Addiction
- Compulsive Spending
- Medical Problems (treatment and medication
compliance)
46THE FIRST CALL
47FIRST CALL WORKSHEET
- Callers phone number____________Relationship to
SA___________ - Presenting Problem (Join Address Callers
Initial Concerns Identify Presenting Problem) - Get Permission to Ask More Personal Questions
- Construct a Preliminary Genogram (use back of
this page or separate page) - Construct list of support network members to
invite to First Meeting - Get Substance Abuse History
- Get Brief Treatment History (include self help,
use of sponsor and treatment) - 7. Identify Past Family Efforts (join around SA
manipulation and breaking one-on-one isolation)
48FIRST CALL WORKSHEET (cont.)
- 8. Assess for Safety
- Is the AI threatening to hurt him/herself or
anyone else? (Are there weapons involved?) - Has someone needed to call the police recently?
(Explore details) - Has the AI been involved in any serious accidents
lately? (Explore details) - Has there been any history of trauma, Domestic
violence or abuse (Explore details) - 9. Finalize who to invite to form the
Intervention Network--Get commitment to attend
regardless of whether AI attends - 10. Finalize time and place to hold the First
Meeting - 11. Develop Recovery Message and strategy to
invite the AI - 12. Complete financial arrangements and any other
details regarding referral to treatment (I.e.,
insurance verification, pre-certification, bed
availability, etc.). Cover all potential levels
of care pending decision at First Meeting.
49ARISE NIDA Study Findings
Data From National Institute of Drug Abuse Study
(RO1 DA09402 )
Landau, Stanton, et al., 2004
50PRIMARY SUBSTANCE ABUSED
- Substance of Choice was not a Predictor
- Cocaine 73 (66.4)
- Alcohol 26 (23.6)
- Other 11 (10.0)
- (Cannabis 6)
- (Opioid 4)
- (LSD 1)
51RELATIONSHIP OF CONCERNED OTHERTO THE Addicted
Individual
- 94.7 OF ALL CONCERNED OTHERS WERE FAMILY MEMBERS
- PARENTS 38 40.3
- SPOUSES/PARTNERS 29 30.9
- OFFSPRING 4 4.3
- OTHER RELATIVES 18 19.2
- NON-RELATIVES 5 5.3
- The majority was female 68.8
- Their mean age was 46.6 (range 15-78)
52PRIMARY CONCLUSIONS
- Included all consecutive cases with no exclusion
criteria (i.e., all Concerned Others who called
the agencies) - Of 110 cases, 82.7 (n 91) became engaged in
treatment (n 86) or self-help (n 5) - Over half (55) became engaged during Level I
(First Call or Contact) - Mean amount of time required (telephone and
face-to-face) per case was 88 minutes (median
75 minutes) - 50 were engaged within 1 week 76 within 2
weeks 83 within 3 weeks
53PRIMARY CONCLUSIONS cont.
- Greater number of network members involved
predicted greater success of engagement and
less time and effort by Interventionist - Less time spent by Interventionist on phone, or
fewer calls, predicted better outcome - Parental involvement significantly enhanced rate
of success, regardless of age of parent or
Addicted Individual - Preferred substance of abuse did not predict
success, neither did severity of abuse nor
psychiatric problems
54MOST SIGNIFICANT PREDICTOR VARIABLE
- The greater the number of significant others
involved in the network, the more likely was the
Addicted Individual to get engaged in treatment
or self-help (plt.0001) - Successful cases averaged 3.3 members (including
Concerned Others). Unsuccessful cases averaged
1.3 members - The point biserial correlation between engagement
success (yes/no) and the number of network
members involved was .39 (plt.001)
55Percent Engaged in Treatment
Stage of Engagement
56Engagement Outcome By Level of Care
60.00
52.70
50.00
Inpatient
Intensive OPD
40.00
27.50
SA OPD
30.00
Self-Help
20.00
13.20
10.00
5.50
0.00
57PERTINENT NULL FINDINGS
- Preferred substance of abuse did not predict
success, nor did severity of substance abuse or
psychiatric problems - Interventionist difference (years of experience
degree age gender) did not affect engagement
outcome - There was no difference across the two sites
- Race, Gender, role of Concerned Other were not
significant factors in engagement outcome
58Real World Test of ARISE at SSTAR
59Real World Test of ARISE at Asian-American
Outreach Program in New York City
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