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Adlerian Family Therapy: Precursor to family therapy because believed pathology influenced by family conflict
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Adlerian Family Therapy: The source of the child-guidance movement
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Adlerian Family Therapy: Alfred Adler
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Adlerian Family Therapy: This theory has been developed in the marriage enrichment, marriage counseling, and parent education
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Adlerian Family Therapy: Rudolph Dreikurs helped develop this therapy throughout the US
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Adlerian Family Therapy: Behaviors are related to feeling significant and belonging as well as to overcoming feelings of inferiority left over from childhood (inferiority couples)
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Adlerian Family Therapy: Birth order - one's position in the family is not as important as the meaning the position has to the person
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Adlerian Family Therapy: STEP parenting based on this theory
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Divorce Therapy: First stage - helping couples look at divorce as an alternative and to appraise the consequences of this decision
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Divorce Therapy: Clients are often ambiguous about uncoupling
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Divorce Therapy: Helping couples and family through the stages of predivorce decision making, divorce restructuring and postdivorce recovery and remarriage
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Divorce Therapy: Second sage - helping family members make the legal, emotional, financial, social, and parental arrangements necessary
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Divorce Therapy: encourages nondestructive communication about the decision
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Divorce Therapy: Forth stage - preparation for remarriage
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Divorce Therapy: Parent-child relationships and custody-visitation issues during this stage
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Divorce Therapy: Third stage - facilitation the growth of the divorced spouses as autonomous individuals and helping to establish independent social networks
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Functional Family Therapy: Integrates three models of human function: systems theory, behaviorism, and cognitive therapy
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Functional Family Therapy: James Alexander
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Functional Family Therapy: The interpersonal function of behaviors provides closeness, distance, or a vacillation between the two (midpointing)
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Functional Family Therapy: Assesses the interactional sequences in which behaviors are embedded and then identifies the function of these behaviors
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Functional Family Therapy: Also identifies cognitions that family members have about each other -- often the attributions family members ascribe to each other that maintain the problem sequences
22.
Functional Family Therapy: Two steps; therapy in which cognitive change is addressed and education, in which specific strategies are provided to bring about behavior change
23.
Internal Family Systems: The mind is multiplicity-oriented entity comprised of many subpersonalities or "parts"
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Internal Family Systems: Applies family system ideas to intrapsychic process
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Internal Family Systems: When a person experiences specific traumas their parts become polarized and more noticeable
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Internal Family Systems: Therapy helps the individual to place the self i a leadership position
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Internal Family Systems: Richard Schwartz
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Internal Family Systems: The self oversees the interactions of the various parts
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Internal Family Systems: Names of different parts, ie. Manger, firefighter
30.
Medical Family Therapy: Biopsychosocial model -- George Engel -- model in which one's biological, psychological, and social systems would be equally considered
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Medical Family Therapy: Grew out of earlier attempts to understand the reciprocal influence of one's social context and health
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Medical Family Therapy: Physicians can view some problems as embedded in family system dynamics, and family therapists take into account the impact of illness and health
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Medical Family Therapy: George Engel, Doherly and Baird
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Medical Family Therapy: Collaborative physical and mental health care
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Medical Family Therapy: Therapists useful in better understanding issues of noncompliance with medical treatment or difficulties altering destructive health behaviors
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Medical Family Therapy: Doherty and Baird -- defined five levels of physician involvement with families, minimal emphasis; ongoing medical information and advice; feelings and support; systematic assessment and planned interventions, and family therapy
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Multiple-Family Group Therapy: Co-therapists typically act as active facilitators to improve communication, encourage insight into problematic interactions, and restructure family relationship patterns
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Multiple-Family Group Therapy: Families serve as "co-therapists" -- families more likely to accept confrontation and information from other families
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Multiple-Family Group Therapy: Involves the treatment of several families together within regularly scheduled therapy sessions
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Multiple-Impact Therapy: Provided families with a powerful emotional experience that jolted them toward more open system functioning
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Multiple-Impact Therapy: Developed as a means of having maximum impact on families with disturbed adolescents in crisis
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Multiple-Impact Therapy: Team of psychologists, social workers, etc meet with family members individually and in various combinations to assess and treat problematic aspects of family's function
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Multiple-Impact Therapy: Robert MacGregor
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Multisystemic Family Therapy: Proves 24-hr/7 day a week availability
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Multisystemic Family Therapy: 3-4 therapists work within a team, supervised by an advanced master's level or doctoral level supervisor
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Multisystemic Family Therapy: Scott Henggler et al. at MUSC
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Multisystemic Family Therapy: Home-based
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Multisystemic Family Therapy: Averages 60 hours of direct service over 3-6 months
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Multisystemic Family Therapy: Interventions pulled from strategic family therapy, structural family therapy, behavioral parent training, and cognitive behavior therapies
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Multisystemic Family Therapy: Goals: enhance caregivers' ability to effectively monitor adolescents and provide positive consequences for responsible behavior
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Multisystemic Family Therapy: Goals: Therapist identifies barriers to effective implementation (caregiver substance abuse, mental difficulties, high levels of family stress, etc)
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Multisystemic Family Therapy: Biological problems identified wand psychopharmacological treatment integrated
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Network Therapy: Ross, Speck, Carolyn Attneave, and Uri Rueveni
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Network Therapy: Aims to break destructive patterns of family relationships and provide support for alternative options
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Network Therapy: A therapeutic team (2-3) assembles no fewer than 40 members of the social network of a family in crisis in order to use the therapeutic force of this network in a systemic way
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Network Therapy: Team meets with network for about 6 3-4 hour sessions
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Oregon Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care: Objective: Close supervision, fair and consistent limits, predictable consequences for rule breaking
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Oregon Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care: Case manager provides 24/7 availability over a 6-12 month period
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Oregon Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care: Each team responsible for 10 cases
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Oregon Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care: Team treatment consists of trained foster parents, full-time case manager, individual and family therapies, and resource staff
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Oregon Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care: Based on principles of social learning
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Oregon Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care: Gerald Patterson, Reid
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Oregon Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care: Goal is to transition home to biological or adoptive family
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Oregon Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care: Intervention: Behavioral parent training, comprehensive point system rewarding normative behaviors, intensive supervision of youth's activities and monitoring of interactions with peers
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Oregon Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care: Youth placed with trained foster parents rather than residential placement
66.
Psychoeducational Family Therapy: Patients from families high on expressed emotion experience more relapse and hospitalization
67.
Psychoeducational Family Therapy: Acknowledges the importance of affect in treatment, in terms of "expressed emotion" -- critical comments, hostility, and emotional over involvement
68.
Psychoeducational Family Therapy: Goal is to prevent symptom relapse
69.
Psychoeducational Family Therapy: Gives families education/information about medical management of the patient's physical or mental illness
70.
Psychoeducational Family Therapy: Carol Anderson