Presentation FAMILY THERAPY
Presentation FAMILY THERAPY
Presentation FAMILY THERAPY
THERAPY
NUR SYAZWINA BT ZAKARIA (1629558)
NURUL HAZWANI BT UZI (1624738)
AMIRAH SYUHADA BT NORDIN (1628430)
NURUL FATNIN NAWAL BT ABDULLAH (1628404)
NUR DALILA BT MOHD ZAMRIE (1628308)
WHAT IS FAMILY THERAPY?
HISTORY
• The origins and development of the field of family therapy are
to be found in the second half of the twentieth century.
• It started after the world war II
• There was so many loss of life back then.
• This is the starter for this therapy STRATEGIC
• Systems theory and systemic therapy can be applied to individuals, couples and in a
variety of other settings
• Commonly practiced in a family setting, as it does not seek to address people on an
individual level and instead focuses on understanding problems in a contextual
framework.
THE SYSTEMIC THERAPY PERSPECTIVE ON
PROBLEMS
• Family therapy and systemic practice supports the notion that family relationships form a key part of the
emotional health of each member within the family.
• Help people who care for each other find ways to cope collaboratively within any distress, misunderstanding and
pain that is affecting their relationship in the family.
• Conditions that get given labels such as depression, anxiety, and conduct disorder are very often effects of
relationship
• Common problems include stressful and traumatic event, work and school-related problems, psychosexual
difficulties and parent-child conflict.
• Conversely, when systemic family therapists see someone in psychological distress they look first for
relationship that have gone wrong.
ADVANTAGES OF SYSTEMIC INTERACTIONAL
BASED THERAPIES
• Relationship problems are usually best treated within those relationships.
• Problems are being treated in the context in which they arose
• The other people in the family or group with close relationship are a powerful ( and
nearly always wiling) resource for change.
• Therapeutic gains that have been achieved in collaboration with the family and other
relational systems are most likely to continue as the person moves forward in their
context of everyday living.
HOW SYSTEMIC FAMILY THERAPY WORKS
4. Through both conversation and action, helping family members to recognise options they have
not been making use of.
5. Collaborative exploration of strengths and resources of family members that they can bring to
bear to support each other.
IMPORTANT CONCEPTS
• Example:
- If Helen’s father talks with Helen about why she is late and works with her to reduce the
behaviour, that causes equilibrium and negative feedback affects the family system.
- If instead, he gets angry and yells at her, she may stay out late more often, and the system is
changed through the use of positive feedback processes. Thus, positive feedback is seen as
having an unhelpful impact on a family.
• Depending on the nature of the change that occurs, positive feedback may also helpful.
WHO GETS SYSTEMIC THERAPY?
• A typical family therapy clinic helps families deal with a great variety of physical and
psychological difficulties.
• The families will vary widely in terms of family structure, ethnicity and culture.
• Treatment most often consists of about seven sessions, spread over six months.
• Ultimately all elements of family therapy including the setting, family therapy techniques
and length of sessions will result from a collaboration and mutual agreement between the
therapist and the family.
STRUCTURAL
• Developed by Salvador Minuchin
• Dealing with problems as they affect current interactions of family members.
• Of particular interest are boundaries between family members
• Therapeutic approaches – changing the nature & intensity of relationships within family
inside & outside the therapy session
CONCEPTS
How families operate as a system & their structure within the system
Minuchin forms an impression of family based on organization of the family, rules and
guidelines they use to make decisions
Rules that have been developed to determine who interacts with whom
Temporary or long-standing
It is Minuchin’s view that there should be hierarchical structure within the
family
Being aware of family rules & structure is important for therapist in
determining the way to help dysfunctional family change
FAMILY SUBSYSTEMS
For a family to function well, members must work together to carry out functions
The most obvious subsystems are husband-wife, parents-children and siblings
Marital subsystems is to meet the changing needs of the two partners
Parental subsystem is usually father-mother team but may also parent or another relative who is
responsible for raising children
In sibling subsystems, children learn how to relate with their brothers or sisters and how to build
coalitions and meet their own needs as well as deal with parents
Other subsystems may develop, such as child-parent subsystem
BOUNDARY PERMEABILITY
Describes the type of contact that members within family systems and subsystems have
with each other
A highly permeable boundary would be found in enmeshed family, whereas non-
permeable or rigid boundary would be found in disengaged family.
ALIGNMENTS AND COALITIONS
In responding to crises or dealing with daily events, families may have typical ways that subsystems within the
family react
Alignments refer to the ways that family members join with each other or oppose each other in dealing with an
activity
Coalitions refer to alliances between family members against another family member
Sometimes they are flexible and sometimes they are fixed
Minuchin uses the term triangle more specifically than does Bowen to describe a coalition in which “each
parent demands that the child side with him against the other parent” Thus, power within the family shifts,
depending upon alignments and coalitions
GOALS
bring about change in the family
establish boundaries within the family that are neither too rigid
nor too flexible
help the family system use power in a way that functions well
TECHNIQUES
Family mapping
• Maps of family interaction allow therapists to
better understand repeated dysfunctional
behavior so that strategies for modification can
be applied
• Minuchin’s symbols for family mapping :
• Accommodating and joining
• - By joining a family system, a structural therapist not only has a good
understanding of the family’s systemic operation but also is in a good
position to make changes in it
• - To bring about change within a family, Minuchin (1974) believes that it is
important to join a family system and accommodate to its way of
interacting
• - One example of joining the family is mimesis, which refers to imitating
the style and content of a family’s communications
• Enactment
• - By instructing the family to act out a conflict, the therapist can work with
problems as they appear in the present rather than as they are reported
• -This allows the therapist to understand the family’s coalitions and
alliances and then to make suggestions for changing the family system
•
Intensity
- Intensity can be achieved in enactment by having the family draw out an interaction or repeat it.
- As the therapist becomes familiar with the family’s style of interacting and its boundaries, more
suggestions
- for change develop
Changing boundaries
- As the therapist observes the family interacting either in an enactment or in general
presentation,
- the therapist uses boundary marking to note boundaries in the family.
- To change boundaries, therapists may rearrange the seating of the family members and change
the distance between them.
- They may also wish to unbalance the structure so that power within a subsystem changes
Reframing.
- There are several ways to see an event or situation or to reframe it.
- The therapist may wish to give a different explanation so that a constructive change can occur
in a family situations
STRATEGIC
STRATEGIC
FAMILY THERAPY
• Developed by Jay Haley
• By focusing on the problem, strategic therapists design the best
way to reach the family’s goals.
• - In developing his approach, Jay Haley was influenced by
Milton Erickson (Haley, 1973), who was known for his use of
hypnotic and paradoxical techniques
CONCEPTS
Like Minuchin, Haley observes the interaction among family members, attending
particularly to power relationships and to the ways parents deal with power
What separates structural from strategic approaches is the attention given by strategic
family therapists to symptoms. For Haley, symptoms are an unacknowledged way of
communicating within the family system, usually when there is no other solution to a
problem. For strategic therapists, the symptom is often metaphor (Madanes, 1981) for a
way of feeling or behaving within the family
GOALS
• Helping family members show love and caring in
interventions and less on power in the family
relationships
TECHNIQUES
Because the presenting problem is the focus of strategic
therapy, tasks to alleviate the problem or symptom are its
cornerstone
Generally, tasks are of two types: straightforward tasks, where
the therapist makes directions and suggestions to the family,
and paradoxical tasks for families that may resist change.
Straightforward tasks
- When strategic family therapists judge that the family they are trying to help is likely
to comply with their suggestions, they may assign a straightforward task
- In strategic family therapy, the therapist is clearly the expert, and she may make use
of her status as the expert to get the family to comply with her instructions.
- Designing tasks, particularly metaphorical tasks, takes experience and confidence.
- Sometimes, however, straightforward tasks, whether they are metaphorical or direct,
may not be sufficient to bring about change.
Paradoxical tasks
- Basically, paradoxical suggestions are those that ask the family to continue the
behavior for which they are requesting help, but in such a way that whether they
comply or not, positive change will result.
- The therapist is trying to get the family to decide not to do what they have been asked
to do.
- Families are often confused by why the therapist is not asking them to change.
- Use of paradoxical directives takes experience and confidence on the part of the
therapist, and they are used only when the family resists straightforward suggestions.
Cont..
Hypothesizi
ng and Facilitating
sharing change
meaning
1 FORMING RELATIONSHIP
Family therapy is best supported by collaborative therapist-client relationship
A time when counselor can let families know their position whether all members should be present or
not
A focused interest on each family member helps to reduce the anxiety of the family may be feeling
Family therapy is almost always facilitated by how questions. What, why, where or when tend to
overemphasize content.