Problem-Solving Group Therapy: A Group Leader's Guide for Developing and Implementing Group Treatment Plans
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About this ebook
Terence T. Gorski
Terence T. Gorski, MA, N.C.A.C. II, is the president of CENAPS® Corporation, a consultation and training firm that specializes in alcoholism, drug dependence, and mental-health services. He lives in Flossmoor, Illinois.
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Reviews for Problem-Solving Group Therapy
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excelente. Muy completo. Proporciona herramientas muy útiles para estructurar los grupos.
Book preview
Problem-Solving Group Therapy - Terence T. Gorski
CHAPTER 1- Group Therapy in the New Era of Treatment
The chemical dependency and behavioral health field has changed. A powerful move toward cost containment has forced an administrative and clinical restructuring of group and individual therapy services. Clinicians who can adjust are finding exciting new opportunities providing strategic therapies. Those who can’t or won’t adjust to restructuring are having problems.
Two factors are responsible for these major changes: the wide spread use of managed care organizations (MCOs)1 to control the cost of behavioral health care; and the growing sophistication of the consumers of chemical dependency and behavioral health services. Both factors have forced group and individual therapy to change from a long-term, supportive, loosely structured process to a targeted, strategic, short-term, and outcome-oriented process.
Driving Forces in the New Era
Managed Care Organizations (MCOs)
Sophisticated and Demanding Consumers
Because most MCOs have the power to approve or deny payment or treatment, they have a powerful influence on the type of interventions used by treatment providers.
Their definite preference is for therapies that provide quick assessments and no-nonsense treatment plans that can be administered in twelve to twenty sessions.
Consumers of treatment services are also getting more sophisticated and demanding. Because they are being forced to pay for a larger share of the treatment, many people are unwilling or unable to pay for months or years in long-term therapy. They want to get results quickly and efficiently, and they know that it is possible. Information on brief therapy is readily available in most bookstores and discussed in detail on many of the most popular talk shows.
When designing group therapy programs, it is important to understand the basic requirements of both MCOs and the new generation of sophisticated and demanding consumers. Many of these requirements have significant impacts on the delivery of group therapy services. Once these requirements are understood, problem-solving group therapy systems can be implemented that can meet these needs.
What Are the Needs of Managed Care Organizations?
Although each MCO operates per its own unique set of criteria and practices. several general characteristics are emerging that accurately describe most progressive managed care companies. Most MCOs want treatment that is targeted. strategic; time efficient. and based on cognitive and beha,1oral therapy principles. Targeted treatment quickly identifies the core issue that will be the focus of the current treatment episode. Strategic treatment identifies a concrete goal for the current treatment episode and develops a specific series of interventions that are directly related to achieving that goal. Time-efficient treatment uses directive therapy techniques. therapeutic assignments, involvement in low-cost psychoeducation programs, and self-help group attendance to accelerate the treatment process while lowering the cost. Cognitive behavioral principles identify and change the thoughts, feelings. beha,1ors, and relationship styles that drive the target problem.
The Type of Therapy Required by MCOs
Targeted
Strategic
Time efficient
Based on cognitive and behavioral therapy principles
Most MCOs require quick up-front assessments that identify: (l) the presenting problems (Why did you seek treatment now?); (2) related disorders (physical, substance use, mental, or personality disorders) that are contributing to the presenting problems; (3) the current level of dysfunction caused by the presenting problem and related disorders; and (4) the target treatment problem that will be the central focus of the current episode of treatment; (5) a concrete outcome goal that describes what will be accomplished by the treatment process; (6) a specific series of interventions or action steps that will be used to accomplish that goal in a time-effective manner; and (7) documented progress reports of what is being done to help the patient complete the action steps of the treatment plan and how the patient is responding.
Although these requirements are reasonable and make sense, they are often difficult to meet, especially when most treatment is being administered in group therapy sessions. This is because many group leaders have difficulty keeping their groups focused on the interventions described in the individual treatment plans of group members. Thus, they often have difficulty getting reimbursed for group therapy services.
Group Therapy Services in the New Era
What is needed is a problem-solving group therapy procedure that will allow group members to work on target problems by implementing a sequence of preplanned interventions. This group therapy process must allow the therapist to plan and track the implementation of individual treatment plans across a series of group therapy sessions. This means each group member will be working on different individual treatment plans at the same time.
The good news is that this style of group therapy is well received, not only by MCOs but more importantly by the group members receiving the service. Group members learn to rapidly identify the goals they want to accomplish and stay on task until they have achieved them. They have a clear set of group skills they can learn that allow them to work more effectively and efficiently in their groups. Thus, they are more satisfied with their progress than with many other forms of group treatment.
The Purpose of This Book
This book will show you how to run problem-solving group therapy sessions. It focuses on practical techniques rather than theory. After reading this book, you will be able to go into your groups and start doing things differently.
Reading this book will be helpful, but it is no substitution for hands-on training, supervision, and experience. There is an annual three-day advanced group therapy skills training workshop in Florida. This training explains and demonstrates the techniques described in this book and then gives participants the chance to practice the techniques and discuss problems and progress.
The History of Problem-Solving Group Therapy
The problem-solving group therapy method described in this book was first developed in the late 1960s. It was designed to guide patients systematically in solving specific target problems over several group sessions.
The techniques were based primarily on Adlerian psychotherapy principles that were adapted for use in treating chemically dependent patients. Over the years the problem-solving group techniques have been heavily influenced by the work of cognitive, behavioral, and experiential therapists.
I first learned an early version of this method from Richard Weedman at Grant Hospital of Chicago in 1969. He had learned the basic principles from Bob Postal, a psychotherapist teaching the technique through the Illinois Group Psychotherapy Association. I became fascinated with the method and have spent the last twenty-five years developing and refining its application to the treatment of chemical dependency and other behavioral health problems.
What the Problem-Solving Group Format Does
The problem-solving group format does several things. It rapidly establishes an effective group atmosphere that allows individual group members to work on different ·issues in the same session using a series of standard group process procedures. The standard format is designed to help the therapist track the implementation and completion of treatment techniques over a series of groups.
This problem-solving group format meets the needs of most MCOs because it targets specific problems, clearly defines treatment goals, and identifies specific time-limited interventions. Group members are systematically guided through each step of the intervention using powerful group techniques. Homework assignments and self-help groups are heavily integrated to accelerate the treatment
process. Group members assume a high degree of ownership and responsibility for solving their own problems in collaboration with the group leader who guides them through a systematic problem-solving process. Thus, problem-solving group therapy is preferred by the group members who have experienced it
CHAPTER 2- An Introduction to Problem-Solving Group Therapy
This chapter will give you an overview of the basic principles and procedures that govern problem-solving group therapy. Group therapy will be defined and the four major goals of group therapy changing how group members think, feel, act, and relate to people and situations-will be described. The role of structure and direction will be explained.
What Is Group Therapy?
Group therapy is a process of collective problem solving based on interpersonal involvement. A process is something that unfolds over time. A collective process involves more than one person working together. Problem solving means to identify and clarify a problem, find and evaluate alternative solutions, put those solutions to work, and evaluate the outcome. So, problem-solving group therapy is the process of getting people to work together, over time, to solve problems by using systematic problem-solving methods.
The primary goal of problem-solving group therapy is to change how group members think, feel, act, and relate to others. We teach people to change their thinking by showing them new ways to define their problems and figure out solutions. We teach people to change their feelings by showing them how to identify and change the emotions they experience when thinking about or dealing with their problems. We teach people to change their actions by showing them how to break out of old self-defeating ways of behaving and start to do different things to solve their problems. We teach people how to change their way of relating to others by showing them new ways to involve other people in their personal problem solving.
The Four Goals of Problem-Solving Group Therapy
Change in Thinking: Teaching group members new ways to define their problems and figure out solutions.
Change in Feeling: Teaching group members how to identify and change the emotions they experience when thinking about their problems.
Change in Actions: Teaching group members to do something different to try and solve their problems.
Change in Relating: Teaching group members new ways to involve other people in personal problem solving.
Let’s explore each of these goals in more depth.
Using Group to Change Irrational Thoughts
Problem-solving group therapy teaches the group members to change how they think by using a process called cognitive restructuring. The word cognitive means information processing
, restructuring means "to structure or process in a new way. So, cognitive restructuring means to change how people process information and ideas in their minds. This means teaching them to change their self-talk, mental images, and how they make judgments and decisions. In short, cognitive restructuring means changing how people think.
There are three cognitive restructuring techniques that will be used repeatedly in problem-solving