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Dr. Minuchin and the Ashtray: A History Lesson

A pod of family psychiatrists is sitting around and chatting about the state of family psychiatry. They are preparing for a plenary at the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry with the goal of showing how far family psychiatry has come since the first psychiatrists embraced the paradigm of systemic thinking. They also debate why family psychiatry is ignored in current practice, especially since the evidence shows that family treatment dramatically improves recovery rates for many illnesses.

When family therapy had its first wave of popularity, the charismatic leaders were out front wowing the crowds. Dr. Sal Minuchin’s sessions were heavily focused on structure and boundary making, and involved much chair rearranging and pulling family members, especially children, out from between the couple dyad and into their own space and chairs in the room. One of his most famous tapes involved putting an ashtray between the chairs of two family members to literally increase the distance between them!

Jay Haley, Ph.D., delivered strategic barbed arrows that pierced the hearts of the family members. Virginia Satir demonstrated the theater of families, sculpting organic shapes that pulsed with the gestalt of the family. There was much smoking of cigarettes during the sessions, by both the family psychiatrists and the family members. Psychiatry was exciting. The possibilities for change were endless. It was the 1960s.

Unfortunately, in those early days, family therapy was oversold as the sole treatment for schizophrenia and other mental illnesses. As a result, families have felt blamed by the negative attention and are still hesitant to engage in traditional family therapy. Nevertheless, quiet pioneers, like Carol M. Anderson, Ph.D., continue to research and practice a measured educational and collaborative approach aimed at involving families in mental health treatment. Indeed, current American Psychiatric Association guidelines for many psychiatric illnesses recommend that families be brought into the treatment process.

Family research has become much more sophisticated, with Dr. Minuchin’s early research on asthma and "psychosomatic families" being refined by teams led by Betsy Wood in New York, and Dr. Fred Wamboldt and Dr. Marianne Z. Wamboldt in Denver. Family research covers a broad territory, from studies on the impact of care giving on the caregiver’s immune function, to the role of expressed emotion in the outcome of illnesses – medical and psychiatric – to the efficacy of family treatments.

However, the Big Question still remains: Which model is the best? Structural? Strategic? Experiential?

While the arguments among devotees continue, studious researchers are quietly extracting the common factors found in the original family therapy models. These common factors are defined as the variables associated with positive clinical outcomes and are shared by several or all approaches. Andrew Christensen, Ph.D., suggests five principles that evidence-based couple interventions share: a systemic rather than an individual orientation of problems; modification of emotion-driven dysfunctional behaviors by teaching partners constructive ways to deal with differences, problems, and emotions; making both partners aware of avoided, emotion-based, private behaviors of each other, and making these internal experiences accessible to each other; enhancement of constructive communication in speaking and listening; and emphasis on strengths and positive behaviors (Enhancing Couples, Cambridge, Mass.: Hogrefe Publishing, 2009).

 

 

For couples and family therapies, common factors are conceptualizing the problems in relational terms, disrupting relational patterns, expanding treatment to include family members of the identified patient and an expanded therapeutic alliance (Common Factors in Couple and Family Therapy: The Overlooked Foundation for Effective Practice, New York: Guilford Press, 2009). Relational patterns have cognitive, behavioral, and affective domains, all of which can be targets of intervention. The therapeutic alliance is with the relationship and the family, rather than with the individual family members.

Patients, families, and psychiatrists all demand treatments that have been shown to work well. Family psychiatry has moved from theatrical showmanship to evidence-based treatments. Within a broad range of family interventions are different levels of family involvement. Family inclusion is the easiest intervention – simply involving the family members as historians, supporters, and allies in treatment.

Second, family psychoeducation has amassed a substantial evidence base showing its efficacy in the treatment of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and many medical illnesses, such as diabetes.

Last, but certainly not least, are the family systemic therapies, which in a meta-analysis of family systems therapies, were defined as "any couple, family, group, multifamily group, or individual focused therapeutic intervention that refers to either one of the following systems-oriented authors (Tom Andersen, Dr. Ivan Böszörményi-Nagy, Steve de Shazer, Jay Haley, Ph.D., Dr. Minuchin, Ms. Satir, Dr. Mara Selvini Palazzoli, Dr. Helm Stierlin, Paul Watzlawick, Ph.D., Michael White, Gerald H. Zuk, Ph.D.) or specified the intervention by use of at least one of the following terms: systemic, structural, strategic, triadic, Milan, functional, solution focused, narrative, resource/strength oriented, McMaster model" (Fam. Process 2010;49:457-85).

Family systems therapy has come a long way from the early days. We are very clear that for serious mental illness, family therapy alone is not enough, but neither are medications. Combination treatment produces symptom reduction AND good quality of life.

However, most psychotherapies – of the individual and family variety – are delivered by non-psychiatrists. Psychiatry is in danger of losing itself, as primary care physicians prescribe medications and refer patients to psychotherapists who are often co-located in their offices. Psychiatrists, however, are still the only professionals who have the potential to see the whole person and oversee the entire treatment: medications, individual, and family interventions.

It is to our advantage to be knowledgeable about all psychotherapeutic interventions AND to use them. We must make family therapy more visible and easier to teach in residencies. Psychiatrists have been reluctant to identify themselves as family psychiatrists because our enthusiastic charismatic leaders took the promise of family therapy too far. We hope that the solid family research now available will encourage all psychiatrists to learn and implement family interventions.

Dr. Minuchin and the ashtray, however, remain potent symbols of how creativity and genius created a new paradigm in psychiatry.

Dr. Heru is with the department of psychiatry at the University of Colorado, Denver. She has been a member of the Association of Family Psychiatrists since 2002 and currently serves as the organization’s treasurer. In addition, she is the coauthor of two books on working with families and is the author of numerous articles on this topic.

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A pod of family psychiatrists is sitting around and chatting about the state of family psychiatry. They are preparing for a plenary at the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry with the goal of showing how far family psychiatry has come since the first psychiatrists embraced the paradigm of systemic thinking. They also debate why family psychiatry is ignored in current practice, especially since the evidence shows that family treatment dramatically improves recovery rates for many illnesses.

When family therapy had its first wave of popularity, the charismatic leaders were out front wowing the crowds. Dr. Sal Minuchin’s sessions were heavily focused on structure and boundary making, and involved much chair rearranging and pulling family members, especially children, out from between the couple dyad and into their own space and chairs in the room. One of his most famous tapes involved putting an ashtray between the chairs of two family members to literally increase the distance between them!

Jay Haley, Ph.D., delivered strategic barbed arrows that pierced the hearts of the family members. Virginia Satir demonstrated the theater of families, sculpting organic shapes that pulsed with the gestalt of the family. There was much smoking of cigarettes during the sessions, by both the family psychiatrists and the family members. Psychiatry was exciting. The possibilities for change were endless. It was the 1960s.

Unfortunately, in those early days, family therapy was oversold as the sole treatment for schizophrenia and other mental illnesses. As a result, families have felt blamed by the negative attention and are still hesitant to engage in traditional family therapy. Nevertheless, quiet pioneers, like Carol M. Anderson, Ph.D., continue to research and practice a measured educational and collaborative approach aimed at involving families in mental health treatment. Indeed, current American Psychiatric Association guidelines for many psychiatric illnesses recommend that families be brought into the treatment process.

Family research has become much more sophisticated, with Dr. Minuchin’s early research on asthma and "psychosomatic families" being refined by teams led by Betsy Wood in New York, and Dr. Fred Wamboldt and Dr. Marianne Z. Wamboldt in Denver. Family research covers a broad territory, from studies on the impact of care giving on the caregiver’s immune function, to the role of expressed emotion in the outcome of illnesses – medical and psychiatric – to the efficacy of family treatments.

However, the Big Question still remains: Which model is the best? Structural? Strategic? Experiential?

While the arguments among devotees continue, studious researchers are quietly extracting the common factors found in the original family therapy models. These common factors are defined as the variables associated with positive clinical outcomes and are shared by several or all approaches. Andrew Christensen, Ph.D., suggests five principles that evidence-based couple interventions share: a systemic rather than an individual orientation of problems; modification of emotion-driven dysfunctional behaviors by teaching partners constructive ways to deal with differences, problems, and emotions; making both partners aware of avoided, emotion-based, private behaviors of each other, and making these internal experiences accessible to each other; enhancement of constructive communication in speaking and listening; and emphasis on strengths and positive behaviors (Enhancing Couples, Cambridge, Mass.: Hogrefe Publishing, 2009).

 

 

For couples and family therapies, common factors are conceptualizing the problems in relational terms, disrupting relational patterns, expanding treatment to include family members of the identified patient and an expanded therapeutic alliance (Common Factors in Couple and Family Therapy: The Overlooked Foundation for Effective Practice, New York: Guilford Press, 2009). Relational patterns have cognitive, behavioral, and affective domains, all of which can be targets of intervention. The therapeutic alliance is with the relationship and the family, rather than with the individual family members.

Patients, families, and psychiatrists all demand treatments that have been shown to work well. Family psychiatry has moved from theatrical showmanship to evidence-based treatments. Within a broad range of family interventions are different levels of family involvement. Family inclusion is the easiest intervention – simply involving the family members as historians, supporters, and allies in treatment.

Second, family psychoeducation has amassed a substantial evidence base showing its efficacy in the treatment of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and many medical illnesses, such as diabetes.

Last, but certainly not least, are the family systemic therapies, which in a meta-analysis of family systems therapies, were defined as "any couple, family, group, multifamily group, or individual focused therapeutic intervention that refers to either one of the following systems-oriented authors (Tom Andersen, Dr. Ivan Böszörményi-Nagy, Steve de Shazer, Jay Haley, Ph.D., Dr. Minuchin, Ms. Satir, Dr. Mara Selvini Palazzoli, Dr. Helm Stierlin, Paul Watzlawick, Ph.D., Michael White, Gerald H. Zuk, Ph.D.) or specified the intervention by use of at least one of the following terms: systemic, structural, strategic, triadic, Milan, functional, solution focused, narrative, resource/strength oriented, McMaster model" (Fam. Process 2010;49:457-85).

Family systems therapy has come a long way from the early days. We are very clear that for serious mental illness, family therapy alone is not enough, but neither are medications. Combination treatment produces symptom reduction AND good quality of life.

However, most psychotherapies – of the individual and family variety – are delivered by non-psychiatrists. Psychiatry is in danger of losing itself, as primary care physicians prescribe medications and refer patients to psychotherapists who are often co-located in their offices. Psychiatrists, however, are still the only professionals who have the potential to see the whole person and oversee the entire treatment: medications, individual, and family interventions.

It is to our advantage to be knowledgeable about all psychotherapeutic interventions AND to use them. We must make family therapy more visible and easier to teach in residencies. Psychiatrists have been reluctant to identify themselves as family psychiatrists because our enthusiastic charismatic leaders took the promise of family therapy too far. We hope that the solid family research now available will encourage all psychiatrists to learn and implement family interventions.

Dr. Minuchin and the ashtray, however, remain potent symbols of how creativity and genius created a new paradigm in psychiatry.

Dr. Heru is with the department of psychiatry at the University of Colorado, Denver. She has been a member of the Association of Family Psychiatrists since 2002 and currently serves as the organization’s treasurer. In addition, she is the coauthor of two books on working with families and is the author of numerous articles on this topic.

A pod of family psychiatrists is sitting around and chatting about the state of family psychiatry. They are preparing for a plenary at the Group for the Advancement of Psychiatry with the goal of showing how far family psychiatry has come since the first psychiatrists embraced the paradigm of systemic thinking. They also debate why family psychiatry is ignored in current practice, especially since the evidence shows that family treatment dramatically improves recovery rates for many illnesses.

When family therapy had its first wave of popularity, the charismatic leaders were out front wowing the crowds. Dr. Sal Minuchin’s sessions were heavily focused on structure and boundary making, and involved much chair rearranging and pulling family members, especially children, out from between the couple dyad and into their own space and chairs in the room. One of his most famous tapes involved putting an ashtray between the chairs of two family members to literally increase the distance between them!

Jay Haley, Ph.D., delivered strategic barbed arrows that pierced the hearts of the family members. Virginia Satir demonstrated the theater of families, sculpting organic shapes that pulsed with the gestalt of the family. There was much smoking of cigarettes during the sessions, by both the family psychiatrists and the family members. Psychiatry was exciting. The possibilities for change were endless. It was the 1960s.

Unfortunately, in those early days, family therapy was oversold as the sole treatment for schizophrenia and other mental illnesses. As a result, families have felt blamed by the negative attention and are still hesitant to engage in traditional family therapy. Nevertheless, quiet pioneers, like Carol M. Anderson, Ph.D., continue to research and practice a measured educational and collaborative approach aimed at involving families in mental health treatment. Indeed, current American Psychiatric Association guidelines for many psychiatric illnesses recommend that families be brought into the treatment process.

Family research has become much more sophisticated, with Dr. Minuchin’s early research on asthma and "psychosomatic families" being refined by teams led by Betsy Wood in New York, and Dr. Fred Wamboldt and Dr. Marianne Z. Wamboldt in Denver. Family research covers a broad territory, from studies on the impact of care giving on the caregiver’s immune function, to the role of expressed emotion in the outcome of illnesses – medical and psychiatric – to the efficacy of family treatments.

However, the Big Question still remains: Which model is the best? Structural? Strategic? Experiential?

While the arguments among devotees continue, studious researchers are quietly extracting the common factors found in the original family therapy models. These common factors are defined as the variables associated with positive clinical outcomes and are shared by several or all approaches. Andrew Christensen, Ph.D., suggests five principles that evidence-based couple interventions share: a systemic rather than an individual orientation of problems; modification of emotion-driven dysfunctional behaviors by teaching partners constructive ways to deal with differences, problems, and emotions; making both partners aware of avoided, emotion-based, private behaviors of each other, and making these internal experiences accessible to each other; enhancement of constructive communication in speaking and listening; and emphasis on strengths and positive behaviors (Enhancing Couples, Cambridge, Mass.: Hogrefe Publishing, 2009).

 

 

For couples and family therapies, common factors are conceptualizing the problems in relational terms, disrupting relational patterns, expanding treatment to include family members of the identified patient and an expanded therapeutic alliance (Common Factors in Couple and Family Therapy: The Overlooked Foundation for Effective Practice, New York: Guilford Press, 2009). Relational patterns have cognitive, behavioral, and affective domains, all of which can be targets of intervention. The therapeutic alliance is with the relationship and the family, rather than with the individual family members.

Patients, families, and psychiatrists all demand treatments that have been shown to work well. Family psychiatry has moved from theatrical showmanship to evidence-based treatments. Within a broad range of family interventions are different levels of family involvement. Family inclusion is the easiest intervention – simply involving the family members as historians, supporters, and allies in treatment.

Second, family psychoeducation has amassed a substantial evidence base showing its efficacy in the treatment of schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and many medical illnesses, such as diabetes.

Last, but certainly not least, are the family systemic therapies, which in a meta-analysis of family systems therapies, were defined as "any couple, family, group, multifamily group, or individual focused therapeutic intervention that refers to either one of the following systems-oriented authors (Tom Andersen, Dr. Ivan Böszörményi-Nagy, Steve de Shazer, Jay Haley, Ph.D., Dr. Minuchin, Ms. Satir, Dr. Mara Selvini Palazzoli, Dr. Helm Stierlin, Paul Watzlawick, Ph.D., Michael White, Gerald H. Zuk, Ph.D.) or specified the intervention by use of at least one of the following terms: systemic, structural, strategic, triadic, Milan, functional, solution focused, narrative, resource/strength oriented, McMaster model" (Fam. Process 2010;49:457-85).

Family systems therapy has come a long way from the early days. We are very clear that for serious mental illness, family therapy alone is not enough, but neither are medications. Combination treatment produces symptom reduction AND good quality of life.

However, most psychotherapies – of the individual and family variety – are delivered by non-psychiatrists. Psychiatry is in danger of losing itself, as primary care physicians prescribe medications and refer patients to psychotherapists who are often co-located in their offices. Psychiatrists, however, are still the only professionals who have the potential to see the whole person and oversee the entire treatment: medications, individual, and family interventions.

It is to our advantage to be knowledgeable about all psychotherapeutic interventions AND to use them. We must make family therapy more visible and easier to teach in residencies. Psychiatrists have been reluctant to identify themselves as family psychiatrists because our enthusiastic charismatic leaders took the promise of family therapy too far. We hope that the solid family research now available will encourage all psychiatrists to learn and implement family interventions.

Dr. Minuchin and the ashtray, however, remain potent symbols of how creativity and genius created a new paradigm in psychiatry.

Dr. Heru is with the department of psychiatry at the University of Colorado, Denver. She has been a member of the Association of Family Psychiatrists since 2002 and currently serves as the organization’s treasurer. In addition, she is the coauthor of two books on working with families and is the author of numerous articles on this topic.

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