1 / 22

Person-centred counselling with clients presenting with drug and alcohol issues: an exploration of the client’s view

Person-centred counselling with clients presenting with drug and alcohol issues: an exploration of the client’s view. Pauline Redgrift MA Client-Centred Psychotherapy, Leeds Metropolitan University May 2009. Research Presentation. Rationale Aims and objectives Methodology Literature review

holland
Download Presentation

Person-centred counselling with clients presenting with drug and alcohol issues: an exploration of the client’s view

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Person-centred counselling with clients presenting with drug and alcohol issues: an exploration of the client’s view Pauline Redgrift MA Client-Centred Psychotherapy, Leeds Metropolitan University May 2009

  2. Research Presentation • Rationale • Aims and objectives • Methodology • Literature review • Evidence, analysis and discussion • Recommendations

  3. Rationale • Current political climate • financial and clinical efficiency • person-centred therapy viewed as generic • Personal interest • 10 years’ experience with client group • pressures and marginalisation • need for a choice of therapeutic interventions

  4. Aims and Objectives • To explore - from the client’s perspective - what had been helpful during the counselling process • What does this tell us – or not - about the client’s perception of the therapeutic relationship • What - if anything – does this tell us about the needs of this client group • What does this show about the suitability – or otherwise - of person-centred therapy for clients presenting with drug or alcohol issues.

  5. Methodology • Data • Grounded theory • Limitations

  6. Literature review • Conclusions • Equivalent outcomes • Paucity of person-centred research and literature

  7. Evidence, Analysis, Discussion • Major findings from this research • What the findings tell us • How they relate to existing research

  8. Evidence • Four categories emerged • communication • change • counsellor qualities • structure.

  9. Evidence • Communication • having someone to talk to • having someone to listen • freedom • trust and safety.

  10. Evidence • Communication – the client’s voice • “Feeling I can talk openly without feeling ashamed” • “Freedom to discuss anything” • “I’ve felt free to talk about personal things, without feeling silly or judged” • “Knowing someone is there, to talk to, especially when something bad has happened is good”.

  11. Evidence • Change • changes in awareness • changes in behaviour • changes in self-concept.

  12. Evidence • Change – the client’s voice • “Has helped me to respond differently to difficult situations” • “Coming here makes me think clearly, when I go away from here I know I’m OK, I trust myself more”. • “I am in touch with my feelings now, whereas before I didn’t really think they mattered” • “I like who I am becoming”.

  13. Evidence • Counsellor qualities • the client’s experience of particular qualities related to the counsellor • e.g. consistent, supporting, encouraging

  14. Evidence • Counsellor qualities – the client’s voice • “Helps not to be judged, the counsellor doesn’t change her opinion of me whatever I say” • “Good to have someone impartial to speak to, not judging, just say what you want to say” • “The counsellor being a real person” • “ Kindness - the counsellor calling when I haven’t attended”.

  15. Evidence • Structure • the structure of a dedicated physical and emotional space • the structure provided by the routine of attending a weekly session.

  16. Evidence • Structure – the client’s voice • “A space once a week especially to talk” • “A time and space to concentrate on what the problems are” • ‘Weekly routine gives structure’ • “The routine of coming is important”.

  17. Analysis • Findings and the research questions • Findings and existing person-centred research/literature

  18. Analysis • Research findings • perception of the therapeutic relationship • the needs of this client group and the suitability of the therapeutic relationship

  19. Analysis • Findings and existing research/literature • Lillie (2002), Moerman and McLeod (2006) • other writers from within the person-centred approach

  20. Discussion • Significant Issues • Co-morbidity • Extra-therapeutic variables • What is being measured • Therapeutic personality change

  21. Recommendations • More person-centred, evidence-based research is urgently needed, particularly with specific client populations if this approach is not to be further marginalised by disorder-specific therapeutic interventions.

  22. Recommendations • A study of clients reporting no change or an increase in their substance use during therapy in order to explore • if clients reported growth (therapeutic change) in other areas • the nature of the changes • the potential influence or not of extra therapeutic variables in supporting those changes.

More Related