1 / 18

Latino Multifamily Group Program – Staff Training

Latino Multifamily Group Program – Staff Training. Alex Kopelowicz , MD Thomas E. Backer, PhD Valley Nonprofit Resources Human Interaction Research Institute. LATINO MFG TRAINING PROGRAM. 9:00- 9:30am Welcome/Overview of Latino MFG Training What is MFG and Why Should We Do It?

zocha
Download Presentation

Latino Multifamily Group Program – Staff Training

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. Latino Multifamily Group Program – Staff Training Alex Kopelowicz, MD Thomas E. Backer, PhD Valley Nonprofit ResourcesHuman Interaction Research Institute

  2. LATINO MFG TRAINING PROGRAM 9:00- 9:30am Welcome/Overview of Latino MFG Training What is MFG and Why Should We Do It? Cultural Adaptation LMFG Manual/PowerPoints/Resource Materials 9:30 -11:30 am Joining Sessions 11:30-12:00 pm Lunch 12:00 – 2:00 pm Problem Solving/Ongoing Sessions 2:00 – 2:45 pm Psychoeducational Workshop 2:45 – 3:00 pm Wrap-Up

  3. PORT Treatment Recommendations • Patients who have on-going contact with their families should be offered a family psychosocial intervention which spans at least nine months and which provides a combination of education about the illness, family support, crisis intervention, and problem solving skills training. Such interventions should also be offered to non-family caregivers.

  4. Better outcomes in family psychoeducation • Over 20 controlled clinical trials, comparing to standard outpatient treatment, have shown: • Much lower relapse rates and re-hospitalization • Up to 75% reductions of rates; minimally 50% • Increased employment • At least twice the number of consumers employed, and up to four times greater--over 50% employed after two years--when combined with supported employment • Improved family relationships and well-being • Reduced friction and family burden • Reduced medical illness in family members • Doctor visits for family members decreased by over 50% in one year McFarlane et al 2003

  5. Stages of a Psychoeducational Multifamily Group Educa- tional workshop Ongoing MFG Families & clients bi-weekly 6-9 months Joining Family and client separately 3-6 weeks Families only 1 day

  6. MULTIFAMILY GROUPS • Five to eight families • Two facilitators • 1 ½-hour sessions – biweekly – 6-9 months • Refreshments/snacks are provided • Initial sessions avoid emphasis on clinical issues • Initial sessions emphasize establishing a working alliance by building group identity and developing a sense of mutual interest and concern. Drop outs are failures

  7. JOINING with FAMILIES & CLIENTS JOINING means to CONNECT, BUILD RAPPORT, CONVEY EMPATHY, ESTABLISH AN ALLIANCE, ENGAGE It is the first stage of treatment Designed to create a bond between client/family members and facilitators FACILITATORS as ADVOCATE

  8. JOINING PROCEDURES • THREE Joining Meetings  SEPARATELY with Relatives and Clients  WEEKLY – 1 HOUR with Relatives, ½ HOUR with Clients • Start sessions A.S.A.P. after crisis or hospitalization • Gain an understanding of family’s stresses, problems, reactions to illness, etc.

  9. JOINING – I • 15 Minutes of SOCIAL TALK • Review any recent CRISIS: Who and What Helped or Didn’t • IDENTIFY WARNING SIGNS – PRODROMAL SIGNS – PRECIPITANTS • Distribute to Families & Keep for Future Reference • Describe the Plan for On-going MFG sessions • 5 Minutes SOCIALIZING

  10. JOINING – II • 15 Minutes of SOCIAL TALK • FAMILY’S EXPERIENCE DURING EPISODES  The Sharing of Painful Events: A Crucial Aspect of “Joining”  The Client/Family’s Understanding of Etiology • Family’s Social Network & Resources (Material & Emotional) • 5 Minutes SOCIALIZING

  11. JOINING – III • 15 Minutes of SOCIAL TALK • FAMILY’S SOCIAL NETWORK & RESOURCES • SHORT & LONG-TERM GOALS (e.g., Prevent Relapse) • Preparation for Workshop & MFGs

  12. FIRST MFG SESSION “GETTING TO KNOW EACH OTHER” Go Around the Room  Background  Hobbies  Occupation  Interests  Clinician Goes First (Discloses/Shares with the Group) SETTING BASIC RULES  Regular ATTENDANCE (for Relatives)  CONFIDENTIALITY (No Pressure to Disclose)  INTERACTION AMONG MEMBERS  PHYSICAL/EMOTIONAL CONTROL

  13. SECOND MFG SESSION • “HOW MENTAL DISORDERS HAVE CHANGED OUR LIVES”  Building a SENSE OF TRUST & COMMITMENT  Sense of COMMON EXPERIENCE (Listen to each other)  Strengthening GROUP IDENTITY & SENSE OF RELIEF  The PATIENT’S INNER EXPERIENCES  Clinicians emphasize the vital role of SHARING GRIEF, CONFUSION, GUILT, FEAR with those “on the same boat”. AND HOPE • Remind participants about Problem Solving (next session)

  14. GENERAL POINTS • New Members • Late-Arriving Members • Reminders about Attending • Crises & Emergencies • COMMUNICATION & INTERACTIONS  Clinicians DON’T speak for clients or relatives  Interaction among members is essential  Clients are ENCOURAGED (not pressured) to participate  Respect others’ turn and avoid criticism

  15. PROBLEM SOLVING IN MFGs • The CORE of MFG sessions • Designed to compensate for information-processing deficits in mental disorders • FORMAT: Checking in 15 Minutes Go-round 20 Minutes Selecting a Problem to Solve 5 Minutes Solving the Problem 45 Minutes Wrap-up Socializing 5 Minutes • Facilitators should GET READY and HAVE A PLAN – IN ADVANCE

  16. SELECTING A PROBLEM TO SOLVE • TOPICS: Safety in The Home Medication Compliance Drugs and Alcohol Life Events Outside Agency Events Disagreements among Family Members Conflict with a Family Guideline • “REJECTED” PROBLEMS: Make a Direct Suggestion and Review Outcome Meet Outside the Group (e.g., Crises) Refer to Past Solutions that Apply Refer to Solution/Family with Successful Outcome

  17. THE PROBLEM-SOLVING METHOD • Define the Problem or Goal • List Possible Solutions • Evaluate Advantages and Disadvantages of each Solution • Choose “The Best” Solution • Implement Plan to Carry Out Solution • Review Implementation and Outcome

  18. For More Information • Contact Valley Nonprofit Resources, 818/990-0176 • Go to www.valleynonprofitresources.org, Resources section – Latino Multifamily Group page

More Related