| Literature DB >> 32055062 |
Mathew Varghese1, Vivek Kirpekar2, Santosh Loganathan1.
Abstract
Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32055062 PMCID: PMC7001353 DOI: 10.4103/psychiatry.IndianJPsychiatry_770_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Psychiatry ISSN: 0019-5545 Impact factor: 1.759
Types and grades of family interventions
| Family psychoeducation (basic information) | Family interventions (specific information) | Family therapy (systemic framework) |
|---|---|---|
| Depression and anxiety | Medication supervision | Schizophrenia with poor prognosis |
| Schizophrenia and bipolar disorders (psychoses) | Marriage and pregnancy counseling | Conduct and personality disorders |
| Alcohol use disorders | Job-related counseling | Chronic neurotic conditions |
| Child and adolescent conditions/issues | Future plans- education, stress | Severe expressed emotions |
| Organic brain disorders | Coping and stigma | Family discord and major conflicts |
| Any other illness | Behavioral management (e.g., contracting) | |
| Improving communication |
Guidelines for conducting interventions with families
| Timings for appointments to be followed for smooth conduct of sessions |
| Arriving late may reduce actual session time by the same margin |
| Any cancellation or postponement of sessions to be informed in advance by both parties |
| Session location would be intimated in advance |
| An approximate total number of expected family sessions to be informed in the beginning; including frequency of the sessions |
| Inform clients about the reason why the family is being seen together |
| Advise clients that changes may occur gradually after assessments and immediate solutions may not be provided as far as possible |
| The duration of the sessions would be informed in the beginning itself (45 min to an hour) |
| Any other matters arising, in the end, can brought up during subsequent sessions |
| During sessions, clients to refrain from interrupting when someone else is talking |
| Family members to wait for turns to talk as everyone would be given the opportunity |
| Clients to avoid verbal arguments or fights during the sessions |
| Inform clients about the confidentiality of the contents of the sessions and record-keeping practices |
| Clients to avoid any discussions outside of therapy sessions with the therapist |
| Clients to discuss relevant matters as far as possible in the sessions even though some matters may be conflicting in nature |
| Make a formal contract with the family about roles of therapist and the family members |
| In families with violence, a no-violence contract is preferable during the entire process of family therapy |
Figure 1Family assessment proforma (Obtained with permission from the Family Psychiatry Center, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India)
Summaries of the different schools of therapies
| School of therapy | Key elements | Remarks |
|---|---|---|
| Psychodynamic therapy | Based on psychoanalysis; emphasis on conscious and unconscious processes; the past issues are still dynamic in the current setting; early life experiences are significant; intrapersonal and interpersonal processes are entangled | Change is steady; requires long-term investment (20-40 sessions); psychological mindedness of client required |
| Behavioral methods | Maladaptive behaviors, not underlying causes, should be the targets of change; not required to treat the entire family; the therapist is the expert, teacher, collaborator, and coach | Parent-skills training and behavioral treatment of sexual dysfunctions are examples; treatment is short term |
| Structural family therapy | Symptoms are understood in terms of family interaction patterns, family organization must change before symptom reduction; emphasis on the whole family and its subunits; therapist joins, maps out, and helps transform family | Especially useful with juvenile delinquents, alcohol use and anorexia, low SES families, and cross-cultural populations |
| Strategic technique | Not helpful to tell families what they are doing wrong; behavior change must precede other changes; directives from therapist are instructions given to family, necessary to make changes within the first three sessions | Short-term treatment; techniques are very innovative; useful in eating disorders and substance use |
SES – Socioeconomic status