Title: Work With Families
1Work With Families
- Step Six of the Decision Tree
- Chapter 14 Family Therapy
2Two Models of Social Work With Families
- Content on work with families is frequently
placed in second year curriculum as an optional
specialization in direct practice (MSW) - When family is the method of choice (step six)
two different practice models exist. - One model is focused on service delivery
financial assistance and protective services. See
chapter 15. - The other model is focused on family therapy. See
this chapter.
3Criteria For Choosing A Method of Therapy
- When therapy is the treatment decision, clinical
social workers may choose individual, family, or
group therapy. - Each method of therapy requires specialized
knowledge. - Each method has a different skill set and
different conceptualizations of the worker-client
relationship, how to formulate what is the
matter, and how to enact the therapeutic process.
4Selecting Family Therapyas the Method of Choice
- Family therapy is the method of choice when
families deal with the ordinary problems of
family life (family life cycle). - It is the method of choice when families
encounter predictable and unpredictable life
stressors - It is the method of choice when improvement in an
individual family member will not occur or be
sustained without changes in family structure and
patterns of family interaction.
5Differentiating Family Therapy From Individual
Therapy
- Individual therapy is based on linear causality
family therapy is based on mutual causality. - Prior to General Systems theory, the major focus
in the behavioral sciences was on individual
functioning as reflected in psychodynamic theory,
classical behaviorism, neo-behaviorism and
learning theory. - The goal of intervention in linear models is to
restore normal functioning through interventions
that biological, cognitive or psychological.
6Linear and Mutual Causality
- Linear causality holds that behavior is
biologically determined (genetics) or reactive
e.g. determined by early childhood experiences or
on antecedent (S-R) or consequent (reinforcement)
events. - Mutual causality holds that behavior is multiply
determined. Therefore the focus of functioning
shifts from the individual to the (family)
system. - Individual problems are redefined as flawed
familial structures and flawed patterns of family
interactions.
7Point of Entry to Family TherapyWho is The
Client?
- Index Person The point of entry to family
therapy is usually through an index person (IP)
who has been referred for help. Problem
exploration indicates that family therapy may be
the treatment of choice. - Designated Help Seeker Alternatively, point of
entry may occur when an adult (e.g. a designated
help seeker, usually the wife/mother) seeks help
for a member who has been identified by others in
the family as in need of help.
8Declarative KnowledgeFamily Therapy
- For purposes of this chapter, 4 theory-based
practice models have been chosen to illustrate
family therapy and to differentiate it from
individual therapy. These models are (1) family
systems theory,(2) family life cycle theory, (3)
Bowens theory of differentiation, and (4) Haley
and Minuchins structural-strategic theory. - As a method, family therapy is more complex than
individual therapy in that the clinician must
focus on the family as whole and on each
individual member in interaction with other
family members.
9Overview of TheoryGeneral Systems Theory
- General systems theory focuses on the
transactional patterns between components of a
system and on the transactions between one system
and another. - This theory accepts mutual causality e.g. that
each component of a system impacts another and
the system as a whole. - Every model of family therapy adopts or shares
system concepts but is, in addition, conceptually
unique.
10General Systems Theory Premises
- The major explanatory premises derived from
- General Systems theory are
- The whole is greater than the sum of its
- parts
- A change in one part of the system will lead to
changes in other parts of the system - Systems are dynamic not static therefore systems
are in a constant state of flux - Causality is complex
11General Systems Theory Premises-Continued
- (5) Feedback is a method of controlling how
systems - function by inserting performance results
that - allow for correction change.
- (6) Systems must remain stable (homeostasis) and
- change (adaptability).
- (7) Adaptability is essential if a system is to
avoid - the forces of entropy (decay
dissolution). - (8) Morphostasis refers to structural constancy
- (9) Morphogenesis refers to change within
stability
12General Systems Theory Premises-Continued
- (10) Tension refers to the push to maintain the
- status quo (equilibrium) and the pull to
- change or adapt (disequilibrium).
- Family systems theory is a subcategory of
General Systems theory.
13General Systems TheoryConcepts
- General System theory (Bertanlaffy, 1968) is a
theory found in many disciplines. - A living system is defined as a complex of
elements with interactions that are ordered
(nonrandom). - System is a concept used to differentiate it from
a collection where the parts remain individually
unchanged whether isolated or together.
14General System ConceptsContinued
- A boundary is an invisible demarcation that
separates one system from another. All systems
have boundaries that identify it as a system. - Negative Entropy is a concept that refers to the
decline of energy and decay of a system
associated with with a closed system and
impermeable boundaries.
15Model One Family Systems Theory
- When applied to families, concepts borrowed from
General Systems theory are borrowed and refined. - System is refined as supra-system, subsystem and
focal system. The family is the focal system. The
environment in which it operates is the
supra-system and its members, in various
combinations, constitute subsystems. - Structure All families create a hierarchy of its
subsystems parental subsystem, child subsystem.
16Family Systems TheoryConcepts-Continued
- Function-All families create patterns of
interaction whereby they carry out the necessary
tasks of maintaining the integrity of the family
system in order to keep it functioning. - Boundaries-All families create boundaries that
govern interactions within the family system and
between the family system and those outside it. - Boundaries may be semi-permeable, permeable,
or rigid.
17Family Systems TheoryConcepts-Continued
- Equlibrium (Homeostasis) All families must
maintain equilibrium (stability) and adapt to new
input (change) - Feedback (input/output) Family therapists
intervene to correct the course of the family
system. Negative feedback brings a deviating
family system back on course. Positive feedback
exaggerates the deviation
18Model Two Family Life Cycle
- This model combines concepts from General Systems
Theory and from Psychodynamic Developmental
Theory. - This model holds that families seek therapy when
stage-specific family or individual tasks get
derailed progress to the next stage is blocked. - Derailment may be caused by predictable,
normative, individual and family developmental
stages or may be caused by unpredictable life
events.
19Family Life CycleStages
- Carter and McGoldrick identify six family life
- cycle stages
- Launching the young adult
- The couple
- Families with children
- Families with adolescents
- Launching children and moving on
- Families in later life
20Family Life Cycle Assessment Stage One
Derailments
- Stage one- the single young adult must separate
from her/his family of origin without cutting off
or fleeing. - Derailment occurs when families dont let go of
their adult children or the adult children remain
dependent or rebel
21Family Life Cycle AssessmentStage Two Derailments
- The task of this stage is to form a new family
system separate and distinct from the couples
families of origin. - Derailment consists of enmeshment (failure to
separate from a family of origin) or distancing
(failure to stay connected). - Couples may experience interpersonal difficulties
in intimacy and commitment.
22Family Life Cycle AssessmentStage Three
Derailments
- On stage three, the new family is tasked with
becoming caretakers to the next generation - Derailment at this stage involves couple, and
parenting issues. Maintaining appropriate
boundaries with both sets of grand parents may
become an issue. - Couples must work out a division of labor, a
method of making decisions, and must balance work
with family obligations and leisure pursuits.
23Family Life Cycle AssessmentStage Four
Derailments
- In stage four, families must establish
qualitatively different boundaries for
adolescents than for younger children. - Derailment at this stage is related to adolescent
exploration, friendships, substance use, sexual
activity and school - Parents may face a mid-life crisis
24Family Life Cycle AssessmentStage Five
Derailments
- The primary task of stage five is to adapt to the
numerous exits and entries to the family system. - Derailment occurs when families hold on to the
last child or parents become depressed at the
empty nest. - Derailment can occur when parents decide to
divorce or adult children return home.
25Family Life Cycle AssessmentStage Six Derailments
- The primary task of stage six is adjustment to
aging. - Derailment consists of difficulties with
retirement, financial insecurity, declining
health and illness, dependence on ones adult
children, the loss of a spouse or other family
members and friends.
26Family Life Cycle AssessmentPredictable and
Unpredictable Crises
- All individuals and all families go through
predictable, normative developmental crises. - In addition, individuals and families experience
unpredictable crises e.g. job loss, illness,
accidental injury - Disruption in a family life cycle stage can
interfere with individual development similarly
disruption in an individuals life cycle stage
can interfere with a familys life cycle
development.
27Family Life Cycle TherapyTherapeutic Process
- Therapy is perceived as helping families get back
on the developmental life cycle track after being
stuck or derailed at a particular stage. - The therapeutic goal is progress from one
developmental stage to another. - Often a clinician works with a dyad
(parent/child parent/adolescent) to help the
dyad recognize (insight) and solve the
derailment.
28Family Life Cycle TherapyTherapeutic Process
- Usually the clinician does not work with the
family as a whole. - It is assumed that work with one part of the
system will benefit the system as a whole - Whether working with a dyad is more aligned with
individual therapy or family therapy is
controversial.
29Model Three Bowens Family Therapy
- Bowens model is a blend of General Systems
theory and Psychodynamic theory. - According to Bowen, relationship patterns
established in ones family of origin are
predictive of relationship patterns in ones
family of formation. - Like the family life cycle model, the therapeutic
process in this model involves a single
individual rather than the entire family e.g. a
change in one part of the system affects the
system as a whole.
30Bowen ModelKey Concepts
- Key concepts in this model are
inter-generational emotional transmission,
horizontal and vertical stressors, and
individuation. - Individual emotional health is tied to an inter
-generational emotional field. Problems occur in
families when the adults fail to differentiate
themselves from their family of origin and
recreate flawed emotional transaction patterns in
their family of formation. - The family is an operative emotional field that
exists from cradle to grave.
31BowenVertical and Horizontal Stressors
- Vertical stressors are emotional norms and rules
transmitted across generations. Examples are
family secrets, attitudes, taboos, labels,
legacies, myths, loaded issues. - Horizontal stressors refer to predictable
(developmental crises) and unpredictable current
events (life threatening illness, divorce, etc). - Families may experience stress and anxiety when
they experience vertical or horizontal stressors. - Intersect family dysfunction is most likely
greatest when vertical and horizontal stressors
intersect.
32BowenIndividual Symptoms
- Horizontal and vertical stressors impact family
emotional transactions and individual symptom
formation. - Family dysfunction is viewed as a maladaptive
emotional response to stress. - A three generational genogram is used to visually
depict emotional transmission across generations. - Individual dysfunction reflects an active
familial emotional system in need of correction.
33BowenTherapeutic Process
- The goal of therapy is to help individual young
adults emotionally differentiate themselves from
their family of origin so dysfunctional emotional
transactions do not get replicated in their
family of formation separation and
individuation. - The therapeutic process often involves coaching
an individual young adult to engage his/her
parents in a new healthy way of relating. - Another therapeutic process involves boundary
adjustment separate but connected.
34Model FourStructural-Strategic Family Therapy
- Premises
- According to this theory, a family is regarded as
dysfunctional when it responds to internal or
external demands in a way that reflects a flawed
family structure or a dysfunctional pattern of
interaction. - An index persons symptom is perceived as a
system-maintaining or system maintained device. - Dysfunctional patterns result from stress and
block healthy ways of relating.
35Structural-Strategic Family Therapy Concepts
Structure
- Structure Hierarchy of family subsystems all
members have roles (tasks and functions) in the
family. - Ecomap Pictorial depiction of the family in its
environment (suprasystem familys formal and
informal networks, neighborhood community. - 4 major subsystems within families (1) spousal,
(2) parental, (3) sibling, (4) individual
36Structural-Strategic Family TherapyConcepts
Function
- Repeated transactions establish internal patterns
of how, when and to whom to relate. - The family system is maintained by a limited
number of rules, implicit or explicit, the
prescribe the rights, duties, and range of
appropriate behaviors within the family. - Patterns that are functional in one situation may
not be functional in another situation. - Familys develop preferred patterns of
interaction are are resistant to changing them.
37Structural-Strategic Family TherapyAssessment
Flawed Familial Structures
- Flawed Structures
- Parental-child structure child is allocated
parental power in the family - Parental-flux pattern of paternal leaving
- Father (or mother) is in and out of the
family military service, job-related travel,
incarceration - (3) Familial stress family negotiates stress in
one subsystem through other sub systems e.g.
spousal difficulties are handled through child
symptom formation.
38Structural-Strategic Family TherapyAssessment-Con
tinued
- Flawed Structures
- (4) Family system boundary Boundaries are
- too diffuse or too rigid.
- Flawed Patterns of Interaction Assess
- Family routines
- Flow of information across boundaries
- Functional performance support, regulation,
nurturance, socialization - Task performance getting up, dinner time, chores
etc. -
39Structural-Strategic Family TherapyAssessment
- Rules
- Explicit rules
- Bedtime at 1000 oclock
- Come home after school
- No profanity in this house
- Implicit rules Inferred from family Interaction
- Dad is always right
- Dont say what you really feel
40Structural Strategic Family TherapyTherapeutic
Process
- Joining Therapist joins (use of self) entire
family in sessions participant-observer in the
family process. Therapist accepts responsibility
for success/failure of his interventions. - Probes Identify dysfunctional structures
- Probes trigger family transactions that are
- diagnostic.
- Directives Therapist uses directives to trigger
family transactions that are either diagnostic or
corrective.
41Structural-Strategic Family TherapyTherapeutic
Process
- Pain management Therapist possesses skill to
contain and manage family individual pain as
introduces stress needed for family to change. - Unbalancing Therapist aligns with one family
subsystem against another to correct flawed
structures. - Boundary adjustment Therapist uses space
(proximity/distance) to mark, create, strengthen
or weaken boundaries.
42Structural-Strategic Family TherapyTherapeutic
Process
- Tasks therapist assigns tasks to promote or
decrease communications interactions among
members. - Mapping Is a diagnostic hypothesis of what is
the matter and its goal directed solution. It
suggests the technique to be used to achieve the
desired outcome. - Blocking Technique to restructure flawed
subsystem. Workers use of self to block faulty
transactions between family subsystems the IP.
43Structural-Strategic Family TherapyTherapeutic
Process
- Reframing Worker strengthens subsystem
- boundaries by labeling (reframing) the
behavior of the index person in positive terms. - Paradoxical Interpretations Therapist offers
explanation of behavior that is counter-intuitive
e.g. viewing symptomatic or problematic behavior
as healthy behavior used to benefit the family. - Techniques of Structural-strategic family therapy
change how members order their interactions and
the purpose (function) of those interactions.
44Critique of Family Therapy
- Cultural relevance These models are criticized
for not being culturally relevant. Family
structures and norms governing family behavior
vary across cultures and within the same culture
overtime. - Bias These models depend on some definition of
normal or functional. Critics charge that
dominant groups have the power to define and thus
categorize differences as pathology. Models do
not address gender discrimination or alternative
family structures.
45Critique of Family TherapyContinued
- Ideology Definitions of family are
ideologically- based. Values determine the
conceptualization of family. - Medical Model Critics charge that these models
focus on deficits or symptoms rather than family
strengths. - Status Quo Family therapy is criticized for
maintaining the status quo (power differential)
instead of challenging discriminatory norms or
practice that negatively affect families or harm
individual members
46Critique of Family TherapyContinued
- Romanticized Version Critics charge that family
therapy holds a romanticized and ideological
version of the family. The concept of family
often masks violence (psychological and physical)
toward women and children while it protects men. - External Realities Critics charge that these
models do not address the objective reality of
racism, discrimination, oppression and poverty
faced by many families.
47Teaching Tools
- See exhibit 14.1 for an example of a family
therapy process recording. - See exhibit 14.2 for a decision schema to guide
you in the use of selecting family therapy as a
method and in selecting an appropriate
theory-based model of family therapy. - See chapter 15 for working with families in need
of service delivery financial assistance and /or
protective services.