1 / 69

Couple Therapy: The Ambivalently Embraced Stepchild

Couple Therapy: The Ambivalently Embraced Stepchild. 90% of Americans marry 50% of those marriages end in divorce In CA-the avg. length of marriage is 7 yrs 75% of those who divorce remarry And 65% of those remarriages end in divorce

lee-hewitt
Télécharger la présentation

Couple Therapy: The Ambivalently Embraced Stepchild

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Couple Therapy:The Ambivalently Embraced Stepchild

  2. 90% of Americans marry • 50% of those marriages end in divorce • In CA-the avg. length of marriage is 7 yrs • 75% of those who divorce remarry • And 65% of those remarriages end in divorce • According to John & Julie Gottman, the avg. couple waits 6 years before seeking help for marital problems Sad & Sobering Statistics

  3. Phase 1: “Atheoretical Marriage Counseling Formation” – 1930-1963 • Practiced by non mental health experts i.e. obs, gyns, family life educators, clergy • Value laden • Advice giving and “guidance” re: proper family and marital roles and life values • Brief, didactic, limited to one’s experience-not formalized nor theorized 4 Phase Hx of Couple Therapy

  4. Individual psychoanalytic perspective-only approach to therapeutic intervention • Conjoint family therapy beginning to be practiced—few, brave psychoanalysts recognized limitations to trying to treat a couple or family by working only w/ individuals Phase 2: Psychoanalytic Experimentation” Phase (1931-1966)

  5. Meeting jointly w/members of same family=forbidden practice; these analysts were excommunicated from professional organizations • Therapy focus: “interlocking neuroses” of married partners (the birth of psychoanalytic marriage therapy) • Unfortunately, psychoanalytic marriage therapy was to become obselete due to emergence of “family therapy” Phase 2 cont.

  6. The early pioneers and founders of family therapy: Ivan Boszormenyi-Nagy, Murray Bowen, Donald D. Jackson, Salvador Minuchin, Carl Whitaker, Lyman Wynne, Theodore Lidz, Virginia Satir, Jay Haley, the Palo Alto group and others. 3rd Phase: “Family Therapy Incorporation”(1963-1985)

  7. Many were psychiatrists with formal psychoanalytic training who challenged the tx of marriage and families from an individual treatment approach which generally meant the unwarranted pathologizing of individuals in relational contexts. 3rd Phase cont.

  8. Leaders in the field who gave rise to the newly emerging field of “Family Therapy” forming a separate & distinct identity from the prior “couple therapy” movement were: • Don Jackson – founder of MRI in Palo Alto • “report & command” attributes of communication; double bend; homeostasis; family rules; marital quid pro quo 3rd Phase cont.

  9. Virginia Satir – experiential; humanistic • “the self in the system”; self-expression; self-actualization; relational and communicative authenticity; iceberg metaphor; mobile metaphor • Murray Bowen – 1st family therapy theorist to address mutligenerational and transgenerational systemic issues • Marital dyad as central tx unit • Differentiation & individuation • triangulation 3rd Phase cont.

  10. Jay Haley – hallmark publication of “Marriage Therapy” defining moment for the field of marriage therapy • central dynamic of marriage is power & control-”The major conflicts in marriage center in the problem of who is to tell whom what to do under what circumstances.” (Haley, 1963, p. 227) • Symptom bearer assumed to have gained and maintained an equalization of marital power through his/her difficulties 3rd Phase cont.

  11. Haley cont. • Family and couple dynamics – products of a “system” rather than relational by-products • “1st law of human relations” – when one person indicates a change in relation to another, the other will respond in such a way as to diminish that change 3rd Phase cont.

  12. Influences primarily from: • Behavioral/cognitive-behavioral couple therapy • Attachment-oriented emotionally focused couple therapy • Psychodynamic couple therapy Behavioral Couple Therapy (BCT) 4th Phase of Couple Therapy“Refinement, Extension, Diversification, & Integration”(mid-1980s; 1986-present)

  13. new BCT – development of Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT)-IBCT with the addition of self-regulation skills • “Extension” phase-role of couple/martial factors in the etiology & maintenance of individual pathology • “Diversification” phase – broadening perspectives (feminism, multiculturalism, & postmodernism) 4th Phase cont.

  14. “Integration” phase – common factors research; integration of common treatment modalities and techniques as well as attunement to client factors that allow for greater flexibility and therefore, more favorable therapeutic outcomes • “We need different thinks for different shrinks.” A.C.R. Skynner 4th Phase cont.

  15. “For many of us…intimate relationships have become the new wilderness that brings us face to face with our gods and demons…when we approach it in this way, intimacy becomes a path-an unfolding process of personal and spiritual development”(Brussat & Brussat, 1996, p.417) Treatment of Couples

  16. Contraindications for couples therapy • Lack of commitment to the relationship; one partner wants to dissolve the relationship & other partner wants to save • Abuse and violence: No violence contract • Transferential alliance with one partner; viewing one member of the couple as the party at fault or unlikable • One or both members of the couple not emotionally, cognitively, or geographically available-depression, substance abuse… Ethical Issues

  17. In the early 1950s when practitioners began to experiment with relational therapy and began to involve more than the individual in treatment, the profession at large viewed this an unethical behavior. It was not only considered taboo, but unethical practice to treat more than one individual in the family. Ethical Challenges in the Treatment of Couples

  18. Now, it is considered not only common but perhaps even better practice to include and involve more than one individual in the system when focusing treatment. • However, unique to couples therapy, are some ethical challenges that the therapist must be aware of as well as thoughtful consideration for the management of these challenges.

  19. Definition of “Who” is the Client—to whom is the therapist primarily responsible to? • the couple • the system-all members of the household; aka “stakeholders” in the marriage • The individual who seeks treatment • The identified patient or symptom bearer Challenge: any intervention on behalf of one member may not be in the best interest of another. Ethical Challenges/Dilemnas

  20. AAMFTCode of Ethics does specifically not address this issue. • CAMFT Code of Ethics states: 1.9 FAMILY UNIT/CONFLICTS: When treating a family unit(s), carefully consider the potential conflict that may arise between the family unit(s) and each individual. Marriage and family therapists clarify, at the commencement of treatment, which person or persons are clients and the nature of the relationship(s) the therapist will have with each person involved in the treatment. • We get slightly better definition and guidance from APA’s Code of Ethics: §10.02(a) When psychologists agree to provide services to several persons who have a relationship (such as spouses, significant others or parents and children), they take reasonable steps to clarify at the outset (1) which of the individuals are clients/patients and (2) the relationship the psychologist will have with each person. This clarification includes the psychologist’s role and the probable uses of the services provided or the information obtained. Who is the client?What do the professional organizations say?

  21. The expectation of confidentiality has been typically defined between an individual and his/her practitioner. • A couple or family – involves more than one individual and his/her practitioner • How does a therapist protect the rights of privacy and confidentiality for each member of the treatment unit? Dilemma of Confidentiality

  22. Can/would/should a therapist keep a “secret” or information shared outside of session or when only one member of the unit shows for session? • What if couple divorces and engages in bitter court battle and one partner wants to subpoena counseling records and the other does not consent? Dilemmas with Confidentiality

  23. What happens when the parties are told that the individual sessions are a necessary part of the work with the couple or family, and that the therapist's primary allegiance and duty is to the patient-that is, the couple or family-what is the individual to think about the confidentiality of his/her communications with the therapist during those individual sessions? Isn't it reasonable for the patient to expect that the communications will be confidential? What should the individual be told about the limitation to confidentiality? Dilemmas cont.

  24. What about collaterals? Do they have a right to confidentiality? Access to records? Dilemmas cont.

  25. Identify, specify “Who” is the client at the commencement of therapy or soon after initial evaluation • Adopt a “No Secrets Policy” & have client(s) sign agreement • Make clear at outset the use of collatorals & make clear when collatoral enters tx not a clt/pt—no rights Solution:

  26. What about billing? • Typical couple—marital dissatisfaction; conflictual communication… • What is the DSM code for this? • Will 3rd party payer reimburse? • What about record keeping & release of records? Dilemmas cont’d:

  27. “Nobody is ready for marriage; Marriage makes you ready for marriage.” (Shnarch, 1997) • Recurrent marital conflict & divorce are associated with a wide variety of problems in both adults & children • Divorce and marital problems are among the most stressful conditions that people face • Breakdown of the marital relationship exacts enormous costs on families, children, communities, society, morality & physical health WHY IS COUPLE THERAPY IMPORTANT?

  28. “The expectations & requirements of marriage go well beyond maintaining economic viability and ensuring procreation. For most couples nowadays, marriage is also expected to be the primary source of adult intimacy, support, and companionship, and a facilitative context for personal growth.” (Gurman, 2008, pp.2-3). • “The roles of men & women have dramatically shifted, and so have our expectations about relationships. We have never wanted more from another-more passion, more support, more connection. But our desires have not been matched by a corresponding new set of skills, and for most of us, whatever we learned growing up about relationships is simply not sophisticated enough to deliver all that we hope for.” (Real, 2007, xi). WHY ARE RELATIONSHIPS-MARRIAGE SO DIFFICULT?

  29. Significant cultural changes that have impacted marital roles, rules & expectations: 21st century relationships with 20th century skills and social modeling • traditional 20th century marriage: breadwinner/caretaker • Husband: if good provider, reliable, not an active addict or abuser, handy around the house=good husband

  30. Wife: procreate and caretake offspring; cook, clean, attend to husband’s physical & sexual needs= good wife • 21st century rules & expectations: • women gained economic, political & psychological freedom • women no longer looking for or satisfied with a spouse who was primarily a “provider” (paycheck) and/or “companion” • Now looking for a “partner”/”lifemate” with

  31. increased expectations for physical, sexual, intellectual, emotional & spiritual intimacy • Strength & emotional vulnerability – mutually exclusive (esp. for men as well as some women) • Need & desire for more involvement, more understanding, more emotional connectedness from men—on the whole is a challenge for men & a common frustration for women

  32. Bottomline, couples seek therapy due to threats to the security, integrity & stability of their relationship; pain-is a top motivator for people to seek therapy • Top reasons given for seeking help • financial • infidelity WHY COUPLES SEEK THERAPY

  33. sex • ineffective conflict resolution (communication) • disagreements w/raising children/ having children/step-blended family stress Reasons for therapy cont.

  34. “Becoming adept at winning the battle for structure with couples is a skill many therapists never master, and, after too many frustrating failures, some end up avoiding couple therapy altogether.” (Weeks, 2005) Video clip The Ref- 3:56-6:40 “Winning the Battle for Structure” (Carl Whitaker)

  35. May lose the battle for structure if… • Do not determine unit of treatment from outset • Fail to realize therapeutic relationship begins with first encounter with the clients • Do not set and keep ground rules • Unintentionally unbalance therapy • Get caught up in trying to determine “objective truth” • Fail to address your own issues about authority and confronting clients. (Weeks, 2005) Winning the Battle for Structure

  36. Neutrality, Neutrality, Neutrality • Alliances form when… • Do not take systemic perspective • Unaware you have lost neutrality • Unclear when breaking neutrality is indicated • Neutrality is poorly implemented (Weeks, 2005) Maintain Balance

  37. Both partners must be present at every session. • 24 hour cancellation policy and cancellations not due to fights or reluctance to attend by one partner. • Partners must be moving in the direction of showing respect for each other in their communication so to not repeat destructive patterns. • Working towards each partner accepting responsibility in creating the relational problem. • Couple must agree to rule of confidentiality set by therapist. • Partners must be committed to process long enough for therapy to be effective. Suggested Ground Rules

  38. Failure to direct & structure therapy • Failure to give clients “battle for initiative” in setting therapy goals • Inappropriate alliances & coalitions • Not connecting with both partners from the beginning • Not allowing couples to express conflict Common Mistakes in Couple Therapy

  39. Failure to confront-making sessions too comfortable • Letting conflict escalate into destructive patterns • Unbalanced or poorly timed empathy • Not moving fast enough when “divorce” is brought up • Ending couples work & referring out to individual therapy Common mistakes

  40. Pathologizing one of the partners • Telling the couple that they are incompatible & should divorce • Taking an individualistic approach above a relational one Common mistakes

  41. Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT)

  42. Therapy typically lasts from six months to a year with 26 sessions. (Research shows that 26 sessions, including the evaluation phase, helps most couples.) Sessions

  43. Andrew Christensen, Ph.D, and the late Neil Jacobson, Ph.D • 2002 book Reconcilable Differences. • Third side: their objective take on a couple, which usually includes some truth from both stories. “There are two sides to every story.”

  44. Developed in late 1990s • Combines techniques from behavioral couples therapy with strategies to cultivate acceptance

  45. “IBCT assumes that relationship problems result not just from the egregious actions and inactions of partners but also in their emotional reactivity to those behaviors. Therefore, IBCT focuses on the emotional context between partners and strives to achieve greater acceptance and intimacy between partners as well as make deliberate changes in target problems.” What is IBCT

  46. Integrative Behavioral Couple Therapy (IBCT) Primary source of dysfunction Problem becomes entrenched Behaviors become more extreme Pattern escalates more quickly By the time enter therapy, couple is very polarized

  47. Mutual coercion • Vilification • Polarization • Very documented by research 3 destructive patterns

  48. Acceptance • Tolerance • Change Solutions

  49. “… When acceptance comes first, it paves the way for change. When you and your partner experience greater acceptance from each other, your resistance to change often dissolves. You may be more open to adapting to each other and accommodating in ways that reduce conflict. You may be able to communicate more clearly and negotiate and problem-solve more effectively since you are no longer adversaries.” Acceptance

More Related