are your clients a pain?

50
Are Your Clients a Pain ? MI , SFT, Brene’ Brown, Parallel Processes & Pain Recovery Strategies July 21, 2016 Core Conference

Upload: louise-stanger-edd-lcsw-bri-ii

Post on 13-Apr-2017

304 views

Category:

Healthcare


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Are Your Clients a Pain ?MI , SFT, Brene’ Brown, Parallel Processes & Pain Recovery Strategies

July 21, 2016 Core Conference

Page 2: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Louise Stanger Ed.D, LCSW, CIP

With James Flowers PHD, Director Kemah Palms, Houston Texas and a Pain Recovery Expert

Dr Stanger is An Author, Educator, Writer, Clinician and Interventions and Thought Leader on Families

Page 3: Are Your Clients a Pain?

ObjectivesIdentify, Describe & Explain Resistant Clients

Learn alignment strategies using MI, SFT, Daring way & Rising Strong strategies

Practice Crucial Conversations

Identify Role of Shame and the Practice of Empathy and Compassion

Show how these strategies may be integrated into practice using case examples

Page 4: Are Your Clients a Pain?

How Do Our Clients arrive ? Substance Abuse

Mental Health

Chronic Pain

Legal Issues

Money Problems

Relationship Failures

Sex, Shopping, Gambling

Intergenerational Wounds

Page 5: Are Your Clients a Pain?
Page 6: Are Your Clients a Pain?
Page 7: Are Your Clients a Pain?
Page 8: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Attributes of Healthy Families McMannis PHD & MacMcMannis MSW

Talking and Loving Balancing Closeness & Difference

Expressing Language Accepting Difference

Adapting to Change Seeing The Positive

Sharing Time together Effective Problem Solving

Who’s in Charge Parenting Together

Page 9: Are Your Clients a Pain?
Page 10: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Keeping The Status QuoSA. MH, CP etc . Organizing structure

Unconscious and Consciously Gratification

Strategies must be employed that change usual ways of relating, categorizing , and thinking

Page 11: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Family and Confabulations

Page 12: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Before Treatment CONFUSED

BEWILDERED

CONFABULATORS- DENIAL

MINIMIZE

FEAR DRIVEN

FRAZZLED

SHAME and GUILT

Page 13: Are Your Clients a Pain?

What Kind Of Families do You Meet

AGREEABLE

ANALYSIS

INVISIBLE

QUESTIONER

KNOW IT ALL

COMPLAINER

TALKER

WORRIER

MICO-MANAGER

BOOMERRANG

Page 14: Are Your Clients a Pain?

HAVE YOU EARNED THE RIGHT TO HEAR ANOTHER’S STORY ?

Page 15: Are Your Clients a Pain?

ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT FAMILIES THAT SEEK OUR HELP

HURTING EXPERTS

MOTIVATED

SEEKING SOLUTIONS

WOUNDED FAMILY OF ORIGIN

BEEN UNSUCCESSFUL IN SEEKING SOLUTIONS

THEY MAY NOT SEE THEIR PART IN THE PROBLEM -want you to FIX LOVE ONE

AUTHENTIC- VULNERABLE- COURAGEOUS

Page 17: Are Your Clients a Pain?

BRAVING - BrownAm I clear in helping client accept own boundaries ?

Am I reliable ? Do I do what I say I will do?

Do I hold myself accountable-Ethics, professional standards &, seek collaboration when necessary

Confidentiality

Nonjudgemental

Am I generous in my interpretation of self and others ?

Page 18: Are Your Clients a Pain?
Page 19: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Motivational Interviewing Miller and Rolnick

NOT a Curriculum

ROLLING WITH RESISTANCE

DIRECTIONAL-GOAL

MOTIVATION IS BOTH EXTRINSIC AND INTRINSIC

SCALING QUESTIONS

DECISIONAL BALANCE

CHANGE TALK

Page 20: Are Your Clients a Pain?

START WHERE YOUR CLIENT IS

Page 21: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Different Ways of Talking- “MY Mother is driving crazy”

SIMPLE

AMPLIFIED - Exaggerate

“It would suck to lose my job or my parents support because of my partying but I do not want to quit just because of that .

DOUBLE SIDED

Page 22: Are Your Clients a Pain?

SOLUTION FOCUSED InSoon Young & Peter Berg

HERE & NOW

NOT NECESSARY TTO KNOW DEEPER CAUSE

COUNSELOR EXPERTISE CALL

SMALL CHANGE Can Lead To Big Change

Page 23: Are Your Clients a Pain?

SFT STRATEGIES PROBLEM TALK

SEPARATE THE PERSON FROM THE PROBLEM

MIRACLE QUESTION

EXCEPTIONS

SCALING QUESTIONS -CONFIDENCE

GOALS -FEEDBACK

COMPLIMENTS

TASK SETTING

Page 24: Are Your Clients a Pain?

The DARING WAYSHAME-GUILT - HUMILIATION

COURAGE -asking what you need, seeking support, owning your story , setting boundaries

Vulnerability

THESE AE NOT THERAPUTIC STRATEGIES

Page 25: Are Your Clients a Pain?
Page 26: Are Your Clients a Pain?

STORY

Page 27: Are Your Clients a Pain?

INDIGENOUS TO ALL OF THIS IS

GRIEF

LOSS

INTERGENERATIONAL

TRAUMA WORK

Page 28: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Parallel Processes Krissey Pozak

Families Grow Alongside of Identified Loved One

Letting Go

Reflective Listening

Learning How to Speak

Shifting Responsibility Back to Your Loved One

Separated but coordinated processes bringing in our Clients motivators

Page 29: Are Your Clients a Pain?
Page 30: Are Your Clients a Pain?

INTERVENTION- BAR RELATIONAL ATTACHMENT

Page 31: Are Your Clients a Pain?
Page 32: Are Your Clients a Pain?

The TEAM

3 Sisters

2 Attorneys

Family

Friends

Relatives

Security

Page 33: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Modalities USED MI- Rolling With Resistance

SFT- In A Perfect World what would life look like

Brown- You Can Write Your Own Story

Family MAPPING

Parallel Processes-

You Can ALL FALL UP

Page 34: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Paradigm Shift

Moving From Passive :Cure me Doctor to

Being an ACTIVE PARTICIPANT

Page 35: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Meet Harriet - 62 y.o Female

Page 36: Are Your Clients a Pain?

How Harriet’s Lights Went OutSmall Tumor on Cervical Spine- Operation-Radiation & Chemo

Oops clipped a nerve- INTENSE PAIN = OxyContin, Xanax , Ambien on and on and on

Finally ended with a Actig Fentanyal Lollipop

Page 37: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Losses

Lost Family Business Lost Insurance Lost Family Money Lost Self Esteem Lost Ability to Walk Lost Her Smile

Page 38: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Strategies15 day detox- Pain still 20% due to Hyperalgesia

Education

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

Mindfulness

Mediation

Yoga etc

Peer Support

Page 39: Are Your Clients a Pain?

OutComesREDUCED PAIN

45 days later lightly jogging 3 miles

SMILE REMADE

BUSINESS BACK ON TRACK

MARRIAGE BACK ON TRACK

GRANDMOTHER DUTY

Page 40: Are Your Clients a Pain?

MEET KING BABY and His Parents

MULTIPLE TREATMENT EPISODES

ANXIOUS PARENTS

NO BOUNDARIES

2 years of work with one

9 months with another

Page 41: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Meet JAVIER

Car Accident- 8 years ago

Previous Experience with AA

Intergenerational

Stylist for Major Stars

Page 42: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Meet Jack 50 yo male

Previous TreatmentPrevious TreatmentsLaminectomy L3/L4, L4/L5

Outcome – increased pain, radiculopathy

Lumbar fusion and Lysis of adhesionsOutcome – failed fusion, pain

continuedPhysical therapy

Outcome – moderate but temporary

Page 43: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Jack Presupposed Treatment: Drug Delivery with morphine

Behavioral Assessment ; Clinical Interview , MMPI-2, MPI,BAI/BDI , Chemical use questionnaire

RESULTS:: Activity < 3, Reported 10/10 constant pain, Sleep < 3, Used Alcohol to increase drug effect, Severe Anxiety/Depression, Results of the MPI indicate that the patient is experiencing average pain severity, above average interference (+2 SD), below average life control (-2 SD) and an above average level of affective distress (+1 SD). These findings are compared with other chronic pain sufferers. A significantly reduced general activity level (-2 SD) was endorsed. These findings are consistent with many chronic pain sufferers

Page 44: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Goals

May not be the Abolition of pain but adaptation to Pain

ACCEPTANCE CAN BE KEY

Page 45: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Treatment Plan

Biofeedback and relaxation therapy

Psychophysiological education

CBT , MI, Group Therapy

Postpone implantable drug delivery

Page 46: Are Your Clients a Pain?

QUEEN BABY and her MOM

Intergenerational

Change Agreements

Treatment for Whole Family

Page 47: Are Your Clients a Pain?
Page 48: Are Your Clients a Pain?

ResourcesThe Daring WAY & Rising Strong- Brown

Crucial Conversations -Patterson et al

Parallel Processes- Prozatek

Journey of The Heroic Parent-Reedy

Motivational Interviewing- Miller & Rollnick

http:www.motivationalinterviewing.org

Solution Focused Therapy - Young & Berg

Dr. Louise Stanger http://www.allaboutinterventions.com

Are You A Helicopter or Submarine ? Sober World -, Spring 2016 Stanger

Page 49: Are Your Clients a Pain?

Pain ResourcesCenter for Disease Control, March 2016

Scientific America -Crucial Conservations , May, 2016

ASAM National Practice Guideline for the Use of Medications in the Treatment of Addiction and Opioid Use,2016

Chou R, Turner JA, Devine EB, et al. The effectiveness and risks of long-term opioid therapy for chronic pain: a systematic review for a National Institutes of Health Pathways to Prevention Workshop. Ann Int Med. 2015;162(4):276-286.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NCHS Data Brief. Prescription opioid analgesic use among adults:United States 1999-2012 , Number 189, February,2015

2013 National Drug Student Data Bank

Kemah Palms Recovery https://kemahpalms.com

Page 50: Are Your Clients a Pain?

An Intervention Guidebookfor Loved Ones and Their Families

LearnThrive:to

LOUISE STANGERED.D., L.C.S.W., BRI II, CIP