User:Einail19/be bold
Strategic Family Therapy[edit]
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Strategic family therapy is a short-term form of family therapy typically utilized with youths who struggle with behavioral issues such as drug addiction and delinquency.
History[edit]
Erickson's student Jay Haley, was influenced by his work and coined the term Strategic Family Therapy to describe
Cloé Madanes contributed the pretend technique to Strategic Family Therapy. The pretend technique is Madannes also worked to apply Strategic Family Therapy
A Brief psychotherapy, strategic family therapy emphasizes changing behavior
Branches[edit]
Luigi Boscolo
Gianfranco Cecchin
Guiliana Prata
Modern Contributers[edit]
Peggy Penn
Richard Rabkin
Family Rules
Family Homeostasis
Quid Pro Quo
Redundancy Principle
Punctuation
Symmetrical Relationships and Complementary Relationships
Circular Causality
Techniques[edit]
The pretend technique has family members choose to engage in a behavior they find problematic, for example, fighting. This promotes change by
Reframing
Directive
Paradox in strategic family therapy is. Methods of paradox include restraining, prescribing, and redefining.
Restraining
Prescribing
Redefining
Positioning uses hyperbole to replace family members wording with
Medical uses[edit]
Drug addiction
Delinquency
See also[edit][edit]
References[edit][edit]
- ^
- Madanes, C. (1981). Strategic family therapy. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
- Madanes, C. (1984). Behind the oneway mirror: Advances in the practice of strategic therapy. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
- Madanes, C. (1990). Sex, love, and violence. New York: Norton.
- Madanes, C. (1991). Strategic family therapy. In A. S. Gurman & D. P. Kniskern (Eds.), Handbook of family therapy (Vol. II, pp. 396– 416). New York: Brunner/ Mazel.