Family Therapy Treatment of Mental Illness
There has been a growing movement towards the use of family therapy methods for the treatment of mental illness in recent years. To determine the facts about this trend, this paper provides a review of the relevant literature concerning family therapy treatment of mental illness in three sections. In Section 1, a discussion concerning the views of O'Hanlon and Rowan's (2003) and Zeig and Munion (1999) for working with clients with chronic or severe mental illness is followed by an analysis of the extent to which they succeed in making a strong case for "brief therapy" with intensive clients. An assessment concerning the contribution of Milton Erickson to the assessment and treatment of different mental health diagnoses is followed by an analysis of their respective approaches and the corresponding benefits and limitations of each of these models. Section II provides a discussion concerning the usefulness of psychoeducational approaches to chronic and severe mental illness and the degree to which the principles identified in selected juried articles can be applied in the psychoeducational treatment of other types of disorders or presenting problems as well as the respective effectiveness of these psychoeducational treatments. Finally, a discussion concerning two treatment principles from the field of family therapy that can be applied to working with a broad range of disorders and presenting problems is followed by a summary of the research and important findings concerning the foregoing issues in the conclusion.
Section 1: Discussing Solution-Oriented Treatments
According to O'Hanlon and Rowan (2003), so-called "brief therapy" represents a valuable and significant change in the traditional approach to treating mental illness because it recognizes that clients are important partners in the treatment process and treatment sessions that are demarcated by pragmatic time considerations. In this regard, Gurman and Messer (2009) report that, "The recent enormous acceleration in various forms of managed mental health care has given further impetus to the development and expansion of various forms of brief therapy" (p. 359).
There are other important reasons to apply brief therapy in certain circumstances as well. For instance, Gurman and Messer add that, "With nothing to restrain the length of therapy, there would not be a theory of dosage. ... The prediction that therapy would get longer and longer was undone by adventurous therapists willing to use common sense" (2009, p. 359). The application of common sense approaches also means that clinicians must draw on what resources are available to develop an understanding of the issues that are adversely affecting clients.
An important point made by O'Hanlon and Rowan (2003) to optimize the effectiveness of the brief therapy approach was the need for clinicians to develop a therapeutic rapport with the clients in order to gain as many insights into the mental health illness state as possible. In this regard, O'Hanlon and Rowan "challenge the notion that clients are not accountable for any aspects of their behavior, or that any concerns or insights they may have are only another manifestation of the illness and have no basis in reality" (cited in Daroff, 2005, p. 308).
Likewise, O'Hanlon and Rowan (2003) stress the need to actively listen to clients and their family members because they are in the best position to fully understand the day-to-day aspects of the disease state. For example, according to O'Hanlon and Rowan, "Clients, and families, do have their own areas of expertise, which therapists tend to ignore and stifle. They are experts on their experience with the problem. ... The expertise of clients and family members is the keystone of the solution-oriented approach to working with 'tough' clients" (cited in Daroff, 2005, p. 309).
Similarly, Zeig and Munion (1999) describe the contribution of Milton Erickson to the assessment and treatment of different mental health diagnoses. According to Zeig and Munion (1999), Erickson's expertise with hypnosis was highly effective for use in brief therapeutic sessions with mental illness clients. As Zeig and Munion point out, though, "These interventions emanated not from a theory of personality or therapy, but from an orientation toward the patient and the therapy situation" (1999, p. 25). In general, Erickson's approaches to mental health treatment include the following:
1. An atheoretical approach in which a novel treatment modality was specifically designed to address the client's unique situation (Zeig & Munion, 1999, p. 27);
2. A symptom-focused non-pathologic model in which conventional "massive personality reconstruction" was replaced with a "positive approach that presupposes a healthy outcome since only symptoms or problems need to be resolved" (Zeig & Munion, 1999, p. 31);
3. Active-directive therapeutic role in which the prevailing psychodynamic and client-centered approaches were replaced with...
Structural Family Couselling Approach Family Counseling Approach FAMILY COUNSELING APPROACH RESEARCH PAPER Structural Approach to Family Counselling Families vary across the cultures, just as individuals vary within the family structure but the overall concept of family therapy or counseling is universal. The aim of family counseling is to assist families work through family challenges and create solutions that respect all the members in the family unit (Winek, 2010). An individual objective becomes the
Community Mental Health "Recovery Model" What is the recovery orientation/paradigm model of treatment? A mental health Recovery Model is a treatment alternative in which the service delivery is such that clients have the primary and final decision-making ability over their own treatment. This is unlike the majority of most conventional forms of treatment, in which physicians have the primary control over decisions or clients are just consulted as a formality. The underlying
Life-Stage Considerations: Strengths-Based Approach Introduction A strengths-based approach to treatment resonates greatly with resiliency models involving patients and their families, as well as family-focused care grounded in mutually helpful practitioner-patient family therapeutic relationships. In this sort of care setting, patients and their family members actively engage in identifying concerns or issues, making decisions, and formulating steps for patient health restoration and promotion (Swartz, 2017, p. 1). In particular, Ballantyne and Gan (2016, p.
Antipsychotic Medication and the Physical Health Problems of the Patient With Mental Illness More and more attention is now being given to the mental disorders especially in U.S. And due to this increase in attention an increase has also been noticed in the treatment of these mental health issues (Zuvekas, 2005). About 30% of the total U.S. population that is between the ages of 18-52 is being affected by mental health
Demographics Patient is a Hispanic male, aged 31. He is the father of one son, aged 10. The patient is Puerto Rican, and was born and spent his childhood in Puerto Rico. He came to live in the U.S. at age 11. He now lives in Brooklyn, New York. The patient is separated from the mother of his son. His son lives with his mother. The patient currently lives alone and
Elderly Australian Population A Therapeutic Approach for the Mentally Ill Introduction Mood disturbances refer to a category of mental health issues that is utilized by mental health practitioners to describe all kinds of bipolar and depressive disorders broadly. A large number of individuals belonging to the senior population (65+ years of age) come in the high-risk group of the psychological illnesses development, substance abuse issues, neurological disorders, and other health issues like
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now