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Providing Comprehensive, Family-Centered Mental Health Services to Homeless Trauma Survivors

Providing Comprehensive, Family-Centered Mental Health Services to Homeless Trauma Survivors. Samuel Girguis, Psy.D. Project Heal Childrens Hospital Los Angeles USC UCEDD (University Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities). Working with Homeless Women and Children.

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Providing Comprehensive, Family-Centered Mental Health Services to Homeless Trauma Survivors

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  1. Providing Comprehensive, Family-Centered Mental Health Services to Homeless Trauma Survivors Samuel Girguis, Psy.D. Project Heal Childrens Hospital Los Angeles USC UCEDD (University Center for Excellence in Developmental Disabilities)

  2. Working with Homeless Women and Children • Population of Los Angeles County: 10,245,572 (January, 2007) • 254,000 people/year experience homelessness in LA • 82,096 people every night • 20% to 34% are single mothers with children • The average homeless family has 2 children

  3. Working with Homeless Women and Children, cont. • High correlation with domestic violence and homelessness • 50% of women become homeless after fleeing DV • Majority of homeless women report a significant trauma history • Domestic violence, sexual abuse, physical abuse, emotional abuse • Homeless women are highly susceptible to PTSD, Depressive Disorders, Anxiety Disorders, Substance Abuse

  4. Working with Homeless Women and Children, cont. • Children – exposed to family violence and at-risk for traumatic experiences • Exposure to domestic violence • Sexual abuse • Physical abuse • Emotional abuse • Neglect • Intergenerational transmission of trauma

  5. Working with Homeless Women and Children, cont. • Homeless school-aged children are highly susceptible to • Disruptive Behavior Disorders (acting out) • Depressive Disorders (turning inward) • Attentional difficulties • High-risk behaviors

  6. Homelessness as a Trauma • Pervasive impact on all family members • Loss of social support • Uprooted from familiar surroundings • Safety issues/concerns • Lack of consistency  increased conflict & decreased frustration tolerance

  7. Mental Health and the Homeless • Typical programs – Adult-focused: • Increase self-esteem, self-empowerment, self-sufficiency • Increase social support • Increase healthy emotional expression & relationship building • Address job-related skills • Linkage to services

  8. Mental Health and the Homeless, cont. • Fewer programs focus on the children: • Increase appropriate affective expression • Learn social skills • Increase self-esteem • Conflict resolution • Parenting classes to address behavioral problems • Tutoring, linkage to socialization opportunities

  9. Mental Health and the Homeless, cont. • Interventions need to become more family-focused: • Teaching the caregivers how to address children’s behavior consistently & introducing “new rules” to the children • Teaching the caregivers and children about the connection between children’s behavioral issues & traumatic experiences • Improving communication & conflict resolution • Addressing family’s exposure to violence and traumatic experiences

  10. Family-Focused Interventions with Homeless Families • Culturally sensitive • Developmentally appropriate • Address unique boundary issues associated with homelessness (e.g., lack of privacy, multiple caretakers) • Short-term • Highly flexible

  11. Comprehensive, Family-Centered Services • Traditional mental health services • Clinic based services • Single modality • Individual or Group or Family therapy • Comprehensive, family-centered services • Multi-faceted, individualized treatment • Individual and Group and Family therapy • Collateral therapy offered to caregivers • Parenting classes • Coordination of services • Consultation

  12. Individual Child Therapy • Trauma focused: • Traumatic experiences • Homelessness experience • Interrupting the intergenerational transmission of abuse/trauma • Developmentally appropriate • Skill-based with a safety focus

  13. Family-Focused Interventions • Conjoint family therapy • Address barriers to optimal parenting • Caregiver’s untreated trauma history: • Flat affect • Inconsistent discipline • Lower frustration tolerance • Duplication of abusive relationships • Child’s behavioral disturbances and emotional dysregulation

  14. Family-Focused Interventions, cont. • Trauma-focused collateral therapy for mothers • Impact of trauma history on the family • Impact of mood disorder on the family • Service coordination • Collaboration with other service providers

  15. Group Therapy • Short-term • Single session model • Curriculum-based • Skill based with practical application focus • Combination of psychoeducation and process group • Conjoint children’s group and mother’s group

  16. Group Therapy for Homeless Children • “Making Friends and Staying Safe” • Abuse risk reduction • Trauma-focused anger management group • Affect modulation • Coping skills • Trauma-focused anxiety reduction group • Exposure/desensitization treatment through trauma narrative technique • “Real Life Heroes” by Richard Kagan

  17. Group Therapy for Homeless Women with Children • “Supermom 101” • Parenting class – part psychoeducation, part process group • Utilized Supernanny television show • Parent/peer mentoring • Personality-based parenting skills class • Focus on strengths as well as areas of skill-building

  18. Consultation • Collaboration with service providers • Being available in the shelter setting • Attending staff meetings that are pertinent to clinical care • Offering trainings for shelter staff • Offering consultation for shelter staff • Offering “office hours” for shelter residents

  19. Clinical Challenges and Countertransference: Providing Services in the Shelter Setting

  20. Practical Challenges of the Community Setting • The community setting • Close proximity of residents, interpersonal relationships and conflicts developing outside of the therapeutic context • Confidentiality • Space limitations • Impact on group cohesion • Impact on continuity of group/individual/family therapy

  21. Practical Challenges, cont. • Inconsistent attendance • Late arrivals to group/individual therapy appointments • Limit setting • Lack of boundaries and rules in everyday life • Therapist countertransference

  22. Population Challenges • Maternal psychopathology • How trauma impacts parenting, communication, and general family functioning • History of trauma and manifestation of PTSD symptoms • Therapeutic content as triggers • Language and cultural factors • Developmental factors • Varying age ranges and developmental levels

  23. Countertransference • Community setting • Reactions toward children • Reactions toward caregivers • Cultural countertransference

  24. Reactions Toward Community Setting • Becoming part of the community milieu • Severity of client needs • Appropriate roles/boundaries • Identification of personal biases and impact on treatment • Safety concerns • Children’s safety • Therapists’ safety

  25. Reactions Toward Children • Behavior problems and limit setting • Frustration at varying developmental levels/ages and the pace of the group • Sadness and feelings of helplessness due to compound traumas and severe levels of need • Anxiety about abuse disclosures • Desire to rescue/overprotect

  26. Reactions Toward Parents • Sadness regarding vulnerability of children and lack of parental resources • Empathy about maternal trauma histories • Feelings of helplessness regarding ongoing challenges (financial, occupational, etc.) • Anger and frustration due to lack of appropriate parenting skills • Desire to rescue/overprotect

  27. Cultural Countertransference • Minimization of importance of culture • Lack of direct attention to culture • Failure to inquire about caregivers’ comfort with information • Disregarding cues about parent receptiveness • Misinterpreting hesitancy as resistance • Failure to recognize differences in acculturation between parents and children

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