JoEllen Patterson, PhD, is Professor of Marital and Family Therapy at the University of San Diego and Associate Clinical Professor in the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine and the Department of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Diego.
Lee Williams, PhD, is Professor of Marital and Family Therapy at the University of San Diego and does couple therapy with veterans at the VA San Diego Medical Center.
Todd M. Edwards, PhD, is Associate Professor and Director of the Marital and Family Therapy Program at the University of San Diego and Assistant Clinical Professor in the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine at the University of California, San Diego.
Larry Chamow, PhD, is Clinical Professor of Marital and Family Therapy at the University of San Diego and is in full-time private practice at the Pacific Family Institute in Carlsbad, California.
Claudia Grauf-Grounds, PhD, is Professor and Chair of Marriage and Family Therapy at Seattle Pacific University and a clinical faculty member at the University of Washington School of Medicine.
The Beginning Family Therapist: Taking On the Challenge | p. 1 |
Getting Started | p. 4 |
Managing Anxiety and Issues of Confidence | p. 4 |
Stages of Therapist Development | p. 6 |
Obsessing about Clinical Work | p. 9 |
Dealing with Burnout | p. 9 |
The Big Picture | p. 11 |
Conclusion | p. 11 |
Before the Initial Interview | p. 13 |
Dealing with Families' Expectations and Anxieties about Therapy | p. 13 |
Suggestions for Initial Contact with the Client | p. 15 |
What Information Should Be Obtained? | p. 17 |
Who Should Come to Therapy? | p. 18 |
Initial Hypothesizing | p. 21 |
Conclusion | p. 23 |
The Initial Interview | p. 24 |
Stages of the Initial Interview | p. 24 |
Developing a Connection: How to Join with Clients | p. 25 |
Handling Administrative Issues | p. 27 |
Defining Client Expectations for Therapy | p. 31 |
Building Motivation | p. 36 |
Establishing Credibility | p. 38 |
Conclusion: The First Session and Beyond | p. 41 |
Guidelines for Conducting Assessment | p. 42 |
Initial Assessment | p. 43 |
Potential Issues of Harm | p. 46 |
Assessing for Substance Abuse | p. 55 |
Assessing for Biological and Neurological Factors | p. 58 |
General Psychosocial Assessment | p. 63 |
Conclusion | p. 76 |
Developing a Treatment Focus | p. 77 |
Developing a Treatment Plan | p. 78 |
A Sample Treatment Plan | p. 100 |
Variables That Impact Treatment | p. 103 |
Conclusion | p. 104 |
Basic Treatment Skills and Interventions | p. 105 |
The Rush to Intervention versus Developing a Relationship | p. 105 |
Basic Counseling Skills | p. 108 |
Interventions Unique to the Systemic Family Therapist | p. 119 |
Becoming More Sophisticated in Using Interventions | p. 122 |
Conclusion | p. 123 |
Working with Families and Children | p. 125 |
Assessment of Child and Adolescent Disorders | p. 126 |
Family Interventions When Children Are the Clients | p. 128 |
The Family Life Cycle Revisited | p. 134 |
Variations in Family Development | p. 151 |
Conclusion | p. 159 |
Working with Couples | p. 160 |
Keys to Providing Solid Couple Therapy | p. 161 |
Special Topics | p. 173 |
When Couple Therapy Might Not Work | p. 182 |
Conclusion | p. 183 |
When a Family Member Has a Mental Illness | p. 184 |
Individual and Family Concepts | p. 184 |
Individual Diagnosis in a Family Context | p. 187 |
Depression | p. 192 |
Anxiety | p. 199 |
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse | p. 204 |
Impulse Control Disorders | p. 209 |
Conclusion | p. 216 |
Getting Unstuck in Therapy | p. 217 |
Understanding Clients' Ambivalence about Change | p. 218 |
The Therapist's Reluctance to Intervene | p. 219 |
Therapist-Client Agenda and Timing Mismatch | p. 220 |
Therapists' Lack of Theoretical Clarity | p. 222 |
Supervision | p. 223 |
Self-Supervision Questions | p. 225 |
Doing a Literature Search | p. 226 |
Dealing with Cancellations and No-Shows | p. 229 |
Difficulty Getting Other Family Members to Therapy | p. 231 |
Handling Secrets | p. 232 |
How Agencies Contribute to Being Stuck | p. 233 |
Countertransference: How Therapist Issues Interfere | p. 236 |
Dealing with Clients We Dislike | p. 238 |
Conclusion: A Final Reminder | p. 240 |
Termination | p. 241 |
Mutual Terminations | p. 242 |
Therapist Terminations | p. 246 |
Client Terminations | p. 249 |
Conclusion | p. 250 |
Family Therapy in the Future: Pertinent Issues for Beginning Clinicians | p. 251 |
Healthcare Reform: Implications for You and Your Clients | p. 252 |
Emerging Trends in Treatment | p. 256 |
The Personal and Professional Journey of Being a Therapist | p. 262 |
Conclusion | p. 264 |
References | p. 265 |
Index | p. 279 |
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