PMID: 8964285Mar 1, 1996Paper

Family themes: transmission and transformation

Family Process
P Papp, E Imber-Black

Abstract

This article describes a method for doing therapy that uses multisystemic themes that combine meaning and action to facilitate therapeutic change. By identifying central themes that operate at the individual, dyadic, triadic, whole family, intergenerational, and sociocultural levels, the therapist is able to develop effective interview questions and design useful interventions. In this method, behavioral symptoms are framed as a current manifestation of an overarching theme. This orientation enables family and therapist to de-pathologize symptoms and work collaboratively toward change. Case examples from a wide variety of families with differing presenting problems, interactional patterns, three-generational histories, and cultural backgrounds, illustrate the efficacy of the method.

References

Sep 1, 1984·Family Process·S J Wolin, L A Bennett
Mar 1, 1983·Family Process·W J Seltzer, M R Seltzer
Nov 1, 1963·Archives of General Psychiatry·A J FERREIRA

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Citations

Dec 4, 2003·Journal of Family Psychology : JFP : Journal of the Division of Family Psychology of the American Psychological Association (Division 43)·Marc J M H DelsingMarcel A G Van Aken
Apr 17, 1998·Family Process·P A Sims, C A Whynot
Sep 25, 2004·Family Process·Michele Scheinkman, Mona Dekoven Fishbane
Oct 7, 2005·Family Process·Rosmarie Welter-Enderlin
Jul 9, 2008·Family Process·Marcia Sheinberg, Fiona True
Aug 23, 2008·Journal of Marital and Family Therapy·Bogdan de BarbaroMariusz Furgał
Sep 29, 2007·Family Process·Evan Imber-Black
Oct 20, 2011·Journal of Marital and Family Therapy·Athena Androutsopoulou
Mar 3, 2011·Family Process·Jim SparksSamuel Tabachnik
Feb 5, 2000·International Journal of Aging & Human Development·R Schindler
Sep 25, 2004·Family Process·Russell Haber, Lita Hawley

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