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TIPS & TOPICS from David Mee-Lee, M.D.
Volume 4, No.2
May 2006
Copyright
2006 DML Training & Consulting | 4228 Boxelder Place | Davis |
CA | 95616
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In this issue
-- SAVVY
-- SKILLS
-- SOUL
-- Until Next Time
Welcome to our fourth year of publishing TIPS and
TOPICS. Time has flown by. Thanks for your faithful readership, interest
and reactions to the material. I’ll celebrate Volume 4 with
a new acronym. A longtime reader shortened TIPS and TOPICS to TNT.
I thank him for that; it will shorten my typing time and make it easier
to refer to this dynamite newsletter (if I may say so myself).
If you
are a new subscriber, remember you can view and download printable
copies of all previous editions of TNT. Go to www.DMLMD.com. On the
Homepage, click on ‘Read Back Issues.’
SAVVY
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This month
I talked with several parents very concerned about their adult children
with addiction and other issues. All of the parents were supporting
them financially and emotionally; all really wanted to do the best
thing for their loved ones. When I consider the quality and quantity
of family work performed in addiction treatment and mental health
systems for that matter, it is disappointing. Much good information
on family therapy exists (for free) in the 2004 Treatment Improvement
Protocol of the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT).
Below
is an excerpt from chapter 4 on “Integrated Models for Treating
Family Members.”
Tips:
-
About
the involvement of families in treatment , determine your level
of attitudes, knowledge and skills, and that of your agency.
Is there
a commitment to improve the level of your involvement with families?
What would it take to get closer to a Level 5 agency and team? Are
families even on your clinical radar screen?
Levels
of Counselor Involvement with Families
Level
1: Counselor has little or no involvement with family
* May
contact families for practical and legal reasons, but provides no
services to them.
* Counselor views the individual in treatment as the only client.
* May even feel that the client must be protected from family contact.
* Not uncommon for the family of a client to be regarded as a liability
for the client.
Level 2: Counselor provides psychoeducation and advice
Knowledge
base
Counselor’s primary focus is on the client’s substance
abuse, but he or she is aware that it affects family relationships
and that counseling will change family dynamics.
Examples: Family may increase its blaming of the person who is abusing
alcohol or other drugs; substance use problems among other family
members may be exposed; family secrets may be revealed.
Relationship
to family system
Counselor is open to engaging clients and families in a collaborative
way.
* Advising families about how to handle the rehabilitative needs of
the client.
* Knowing how to channel communication through one or two key members.
* Identifying gross family dysfunction that interferes with substance
abuse treatment.
* Referring the family for specialized family therapy treatment.
Level
3: Counselor addresses family members’ feelings and provides
support
Knowledge
base
Counselor understands normal family development and family reactions
to stress.
Relationship
to family system
Counselor is aware of personal feelings in relating to the client
and family.
Skills
* Asking questions that elicit family members’ expressions of
concern and feelings related to the client’s condition and its
effects on the family.
* Empathically listening to family members’ concerns and feelings
and, where appropriate, normalizing them.
* Forming a preliminary assessment of the family’s level of
functioning as it relates to the client’s problems.
* Encouraging family members in their efforts to cope with their situation
as a family.
* Tailoring substance abuse education to the unique needs, concerns
and feelings of the family.
* Identifying family dysfunction and fitting referral recommendations
to the unique situation of the family.
Level
4: Counselor provides systematic assessment and planned intervention
Knowledge
base
Counselor understands the concept of family systems.
Relationship
to family system
Counselor is aware of his or her own participation in systems, including
the therapeutic relationship, the treatment system, his or her own
family system, and larger community system.
Skills
* Engaging family members, including reluctant ones, in a planned
family conference or a series of conferences.
* Structuring a conference with even a poorly communicating family
in such a way that all members have a chance to express themselves.
* Systematically assessing the family’s level of functioning.
* Supporting individual members while avoiding coalitions.
* Reframing the family’s definition of its problem in a way
that makes problem-solving more achievable.
* Helping family members view their difficulties as requiring new
forms of collaborative efforts.
* Helping family members generate alternative, mutually acceptable
ways to cope with difficulties.
* Helping the family balance its coping efforts by calibrating various
roles so that members can support each other without sacrificing autonomy.
* Identifying family dysfunction beyond the scope of primary care
treatment; orchestrating a referral by informing the family and the
specialist about what to expect from each other.
Level
5: Family Therapy
Knowledge
base
The counselor has received training and supervision to move to this
level of expertise. He understands family systems and patterns typical
of dysfunctional families and interacts with professionals in other
health care systems.
Relationship
to family system
The counselor can handle intense emotions in families and in him-
or herself and maintain neutrality despite strong pressure from family
members (or other professionals) to take sides.
Skills
* Interviewing families or family members who are difficult to engage.
* Efficiently generating and testing hypotheses about the family’s
difficulties and interaction patterns.
* Escalating conflict in the family in order to break a family impasse.
* Temporarily siding with the one family member against another.
* Constructively dealing with a family’s strong resistance to
change.
* Negotiating collaborative relationships with professionals from
other systems that are working with the family, even when these groups
are at odds with one another.
References
The information above was drawn from Treatment Improvement Protocol
(2004) TIP 39 produced by SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration).
Treatment
Improvement Protocol (2004) TIP 39: Substance Abuse Treatment
and Family Therapy, Chairs: Edward Kaufman and Marianne R.M.
Yoshioka, TIP No.39, pp. 80-82.
This
material was adapted from Doherty and Baird 1986. Doherty, W.J., and
Baird, M.A. Developmental levels in family-centered medical care.
Family Medicine 18(3):153-156, 1986
To read
more on family work, see the August 2004 edition of TNT. www.dmlmd.com/2004.08.ezine.html
SKILLS
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You may not yet be able to engage your agency to increase the level
of counselor involvement with families. However you can always start
to improve family involvement with your own clients.
Tips:
Many
clients come from disadvantaged homes where they have burnt their
bridges; you can tend to think that family issues are not as relevant.
Reconsider the meaning of “family” in a broader sense
– i.e. to encompass significant others and supports in the person’s
immediate environment. If we think this way, then all of our clients
have families to be considered and addressed.
Some
clients have more intact families. It is not unusual that parents,
siblings, children or other relatives are the ones to seek out information
about treatment resources. It is good policy to have both the identified
client and the significant family members present right from the beginning
at the assessment. This is especially true if the family is supporting
the client financially and emotionally, if the client is an adolescent
or young adult, or functionally a minor who is being taken care of.
The family
usually has many unanswered questions and concerns. Remember they
also have many answers to important assessment and evaluation questions.
They can provide a perspective based on their many attempts to change
the effect of addiction on the family; not to mention the pain and
emotional distress from years of trying to cope with addiction illness
and its effects on the family.
For a
person estranged from blood relatives the equivalent “family”
members may be the judge, probation or parole officer, child protection
case worker, or case manager. These individuals may also take on the
same position and behavior of a family member, and be more concerned
about treatment than the identified client. Help may need to begin
with a focus on the family, not the identified client. Therapy can
focus more on helping families decide how much longer they want to
keep subsidizing their child’s substance use and lifestyle with
which they disagree. They need help to clarify their needs and limits
so that they can convey a clear unified message to their loved one.
At this point in time, the family work may actually be the more important
work to do- rather than with the identified client yet.
Families
are at various stages of change regarding what to do to promote recovery.
They may not realize how their loving care is actually promoting irresponsible
and self-destructive behavior. A mother might never have thought of
herself as subsidizing her child’s addiction when she does not
charge rent or board, or when she gives her son spending money. On
the other hand, a sister or brother may be quite aware that what they
are doing is not helping their sibling. However they feel at a loss
to know how to set a limit without feeling overwhelming guilt; the
substance user knows all too well how to play on this guilt to his/her
advantage.
The family
may be in so much pain themselves they feel stuck on how to have a
life of their own, and take care of their own needs. Imagine an adult
woman who has grown up as a child of an alcoholic mother. She may
have learned that her purpose in life was to take care of her mother
and her siblings, give up her own needs to rescue and take care of
them. Her own needs for nurturance and support have never been filled.
Or in another situation, family members may be so angry and frustrated
that they need an understanding ear. Our job is to help them bear
the pain, rather than confront them as “enablers” and
“co-dependent”.
I remember
once being judgmental of a wife and mother who bought alcohol for
her end-stage alcoholic husband stricken with liver cirrhosis. But
as I listened more to her, she told me the only way she knew to keep
her husband from yelling, abusing her and her children was to buy
him the liquor to keep him quiet. She could not figure how to extricate
herself from the stressful repetitive cycle. What she needed was compassion
and guidance, not just an admonition to attend Al-Anon and family
psychoeducation once a week.
SOUL
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For 10 years I have been doing fulltime training and consulting; this
means a lot of air travel. Summer is approaching in the northern hemisphere.
Perhaps you’ll be one of the millions of air travelers taking
to the skies on vacation. For you, I offer my Top Ten List of Tips
for the Not-So-Frequent-Flier. Not as good as Dave Letterman’s
Top Ten, but they’ll be more useful. I must be honest though.
These tips don’t emanate purely from my altruistic nature. My
eyes roll (I know I should be more patient) when subjected to a novice
flier’s “deer in the headlights” behavior at airports
and on planes.
Here goes:
-
Have your Passport or government ID out and ready to show the security
agent before you reach the agent. You’ll get nasty looks if
you start fumbling through your luggage looking for your ID only
when you arrive at the agent – especially if you’ve
been standing in the security line for 30 minutes already with ample
time to locate your ID.
-
In the USA, keep hold of your Boarding Pass. Don’t put it
in your carry-on bag or purse you put through the security X-ray
machine. You’ll need it to show to the agent who shepherds
you through the metal detector.
-
Take out or off all your metal, coins, mobile phones, pens and big
buckle belts before you reach X- ray machine belt. If it takes a
while to “de-metal” yourself, at least step to the side
a little while you take you time to do that. Let others pass and
keep the line moving.
-
In the USA, remove your shoes and put them through the X-ray machine
-even if you are sure they contain no metal. Don’t argue with
the Transportation Security agents. They have the power to hold
you up; you’ll be asked to step to the side for special screening
with a hand wand detector. They figure you’ll take off your
shoes the next time without arguing.
-
Take out your video camera and laptop computer; put those on the
X-ray belt separately from your bag. And of course, doing it while
you are waiting in that long line is better than doing that at the
X-ray belt.
-
Don’t try to carry on 2 big roll-on bags and your small brief
case or package. You’ll only have return to Ticketing to check
one of the bags. If you have just one roll-on bag with outside pockets
stuffed and bulging (the special expanding feature has made your
bag two inches fatter) expect to remove some contents from the outside
pocket. Your bag will not fit in the overheard bin. You don’t
want to have to take out all your dirty laundry in front of everyone
on the plane.
-
It’s nice to be hands-free, wear that backpack, and sling
that bag over your shoulder. Be aware that your personal space has
now expanded considerably. As you walk through the airplane aisle
looking for your seat, be aware your shoulder bag may be slapping
each aisle-seated passenger in the face. Your backpack can be a
weapon of minor destruction as you swing round suddenly -forgetting
your back has a “punching bag” strapped to it.
-
Sharing is always thoughtful. If you’re carrying a small bag
or package that can fit under the seat in front of you, put it there.
Leave more space for larger items in the overhead bin. You are sharing
that space with maybe six other people. (Note: if you are seated
in the bulkhead, yes you get more leg room, but your carry-ons and
packages have to be in the overhead bin for take off and landing.)
The other sharing thing is the arm-rest. Unless you are in First
Class, the arm rest belongs to you and the person seated next to
you.
-
I
know the recline button doesn’t convert your airline seat
to the same luxurious horizontal position as your expensive recliner
chair at home (unless you are in First or Business Class on an international
trip). But quite a hassle can be caused if you recline your seat
back suddenly - even the few inches it goes. You can smash the laptop
screen of the passenger behind you; spill their drink with the jerking
movement; send papers flying and other nice things. So recline -
but recline slowly. Even check behind you, warning your fellow traveler
you are heading for their lap! Oh and by the way- should you be
moving from a window or middle seat to the aisle, remember the headrest
and upper part of the passenger’s seat in front is not a steel
handrail. Grabbing the headrest strongly jerks the person in front
as annoyingly as a two year old banging his legs into the back of
your seat repeatedly.
And now,
No.10 of the Top Ten List of Tips for the Not-So-Frequent-Flier----
10.
Turn your cell and mobile phone to vibrate, silence, or at least a
very low volume. Most passengers are not interested in your latest
download ring tone, or some annoying loud alert sound. One trip last
holiday season, just before take-off, a couple of women decided to
call their friend using the speakerphone feature on their cell phone.
I was not interested, at all, in a three-way broadcast of what gifts
they got or were about to send to friends.
Happy
Travels and welcome to the “Friendly Skies”!!
Until
Next Time
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See you next month.
David
Contact Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
email: info@dmlmd.com
phone: 530-753-4300
web: http://www.dmlmd.com
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Copyright
2006 DML Training & Consulting | 4228 Boxelder Place | Davis |
CA | 95616
|