motivational interviewing dr karen meechan [email protected] msc addictions 28/01/2014

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Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan [email protected] Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

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Page 1: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Motivational Interviewing

Dr Karen [email protected]

Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Page 2: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Aims of Session

To

• Understand the spirit of MI

• Understand the fundamental skills required for MI

• Understand the four foundational processes of MI

Page 3: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Opening Exercise

• Think of something (that you don’t mind disclosing) that you feel in two minds about changing

• Split into pairs • Person 1: Share your dilemma with your

partner• Person 2: Argue strongly in favour of

change. Whatever the person says - do not deviate from this position

Page 4: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Issues Raised?

• Ambivalence about change is normal • Motivation fluctuates: it is dynamic• Motivation can be influenced by the way we are

talked to, and talk about it: it is interpersonal• ‘Resistance’ can be generated in the interaction• The Righting Reflex influences us as therapists• The more we say something the more we believe it

(Self-Perception Theory, Bem 1967)• Confidence to change is crucial (Self-Efficacy)

Page 5: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

“People are generally better persuaded by the reasons which they themselves have discovered, than by those that have come into the minds of others”

Blaise Pascal – 17th century

Page 6: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Motivational Interviewing Origins

• Key people: William Miller and Steve Rollnick• USA: Culture of conflict in treatment• ‘Resistance’ attributed to the pathology of

patients, ie. “Addicts lack motivation and always deny the

severity of the problem”• William Miller was interested in how the

behaviour of counsellors might influence their clients’ behaviour

• Direct persuasion elicits resistance and denial can be experimentally manipulated

Page 7: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

A Definition of MI

“A client-centred, directive method for enhancing intrinsic motivation to change by exploring and resolving ambivalence”

Miller, W.R. and Rollnick, S. (2002). Motivational Interviewing – Preparing People for Change (2nd edition). NY: Guilford Press

“Having a quiet and constructive discussion about change in which the client drives the process as much as possible”

Rollnick, S. and Allison, J. (2004) Motivational Interviewing in N. Heather and T. Stockwell (Eds), Treatment and Prevention of Alcohol Problems. Chichester: Wiley

Page 8: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

The Spirit of MIFundamental approach of MI

Collaboration. Counselling involves a partnership that honours the client’s expertise and perspectives. The counsellor provides an atmosphere that is conducive rather than coercive to change.

Evocation. The resources and motivation for change are presumed to reside within the client. Intrinsic motivation for change is enhanced by drawing on the client’s own perceptions, goals and values.

Autonomy. The counsellor affirms the client’s right and capacity for self direction and facilitates informed choice.

Compassion – MI-3

Mirror-image opposite approach to counselling

Confrontation. Counselling involves over-riding the client’s impaired perspectives by imposing awareness and acceptance of reality that the client cannot see or will not admit.

Education. The client is presumed to lack key knowledge, insight, and or/skills that are necessary for change to occur. The counsellor seeks to address these deficits by providing the requisite enlightenment.

Authority. The counsellor tells the client what he or she must do.

Page 9: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Summary of MI

• Not just a set of techniques. It is a clinical style – a way of being with clients

• Provides way of having conversations about behaviour change

• These conversations can be inherently ‘thorny’

• Aims to resolve ambivalence (which is normal not pathological)

• Minimises ‘resistance’• Builds client’s internal motivation for change

Page 10: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Motivation: “Ready, Willing and Able”

Willing: Importance of change - Why?

Able: Confidence for change - How?

Ready: A matterof priorities

Page 11: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Principles of MI

• Express empathy

• Roll with resistance

• Support self-efficacy

• Develop discrepancy

Page 12: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Four Foundational Processes in MI

The Relational Foundation

The Strategic Focus

The Transition to MI

The Bridge to ChangePlanning

Evoking

Guiding

Engaging

Page 13: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Engaging

Therapeutic Empathy

+

The OARS – Fundamental strategies used in MI (also basic conversation, communication and counselling skills)

• Ask Open Questions

• Affirm

• Listen Reflectively

• Summarise

Page 14: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Guiding

The strategic (directional) focus of MI• Finding a direction and developing changes or

goals• Agenda setting• Giving information and advice (ask-provide-

ask)MI is a guiding style, but not all guiding is MI

Engaging and Guiding are MI-consistentpractice, but not yet (in themselves) MI

Page 15: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Evoking

• The bridge to MI

• There is a clear change goal• Selective eliciting (OARS)

– Recognizing change talk– Eliciting change talk (e.g., selective questions)– Responding to change talk (e.g. selective

reflection)– Summarizing change talk– Using the importance and confidence ruler

Page 16: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Change Continuum (Prochaska and DiClemente, 1982)

(if you assume the client is more to the right then they are - you are likely to encounter ‘sustain talk’)

No change

Change

Precontemplation

Contemplation

Decision

Action

Page 17: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

What is Unique to MI?

• Attuned to and guided by certain types of natural language (change talk)

• Intentional, differential evoking and strengthening of change talk

• Strategic-directional use of client-centered counseling methods (reflection, summary)

Page 18: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Applications in the Research

• Substance misuse, sexual health, dietary change, weight loss, voice therapy, gambling, physical activity promotion, medication adherence, diabetes, depression, anxiety, OCD, eating disorders, dual diagnosis, chronic leg ulceration, criminal justice, vascular risk, stroke rehabilitation, chronic pain, self-care, domestic violence, child health, oral health

• Whole issue of 2009 Journal Clinical Psychology (65, 11) about MI, including how it can be integrated with other psychotherapeutic approaches to treat mental health problems

Page 19: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Evidence Base• A lot of research (700 Psychinfo citations 2000-2009),

using variations of MI (eg. MET) and combined with other therapies, elements of MI only

• Applied to many clinical problems• Lundahl et al. (2010): Meta Analysis of MI. Significantly

better than TAU/no treatment, as good as other approaches (eg CBT, 12 step), shorter treatment, effects are durable over time, severity of problem does not affect effectiveness

• Ashton (2005): Consistently beneficial for less committed clients but can worsen outcomes to those already committed

• Moyers et al. (2009): Client change talk, once mobilised by therapist behaviour during MI sessions (eg. reflecting change talk when occurs) leads to reduced drinking

Page 20: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

ReferencesAshton, M. (2005). The motivational hallo. Drug and Alcohol Findings, 13, 23-

30.Bem, D.J. (1967). Self-perception theory: an alternative interpretation of

cognitive dissonance phenomena. Psychological Review 73, 183-200.Lundahl, B.W, Kunz, C., Brownell, C. et al. (2010). A meta analysis of

motivational intervewing: twenty five years of empirical studies. Research on Social Work Practice, 20 (2), 37-160.

Miller W.R. and Rollnick, S. (2002). Motivational Interviewing: Preparing People to Change (2nd Ed). New York: Guilford Press.

Prochaska, J.O. and DiClemente, C.C. (1982). Transtheoretical therapy: Towards a more integrative model of change. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 19, 276-288.

Rollnick, S. and Allison, J. (2004) Motivational Interviewing in N. Heather and T. Stockwell (Eds), Treatment and Prevention of Alcohol Problems. Chichester: Wiley

Moyers, T. B., Martin, T., Houck, J.M. et al. (2009). From in-session behaviors to drinking outcomes: a causal chain for motivational interviewing. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 77, 6, 1113-1124.

Page 21: Motivational Interviewing Dr Karen Meechan Karen.Meechan@slam.nhs.uk Msc Addictions 28/01/2014

Further Reading

Website resource: www.motivationalinterview.org Miller, W. (1998) Why do people change addictive behaviour? The

1996 H. David Archibald Lecture Addiction 93 (2), 163- 172.Miller, W.R. and Rollnick, S. (2009) Ten things that motivational

interviewing is not. Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy 37, 129-140.

Pilling, S., Hesketh, K. and Mitcheson, L. (2010). Routes to Recovery: Psychosocial Interventions fo Drug Misuse. London: BPS and NTA. http://www.nta.nhs.uk/uploads/psychosocial_toolkit_june10.pdf

Rollnick, S., Miller, W. and Butler, C. (2008). Motivational Interviewing in Health Care: Helping Patients Change Behaviour. London: Guildford Press.