Title: Parent Child Interaction Therapy PCIT Implementation Guidelines
1Parent Child Interaction Therapy
(PCIT)Implementation Guidelines
The Future of School Psychology Task Force on
Family-School Partnerships Kathryn Woods,
Stephanie Bieltz, and Amanda Clinton
2Factors Influencing the Effectiveness of PCIT
- Parents
- Average or High IQ
- Strong Motivation
- Child
- Ages between 2 and 7
- Good Receptive Language Skills
- Family
- Good Marital Adjustment
- Extended Family Support
3Presenting Problems That May Be Addressed Using
PCIT
- Noncompliance
- Verbal Aggression
- Physical Aggression
- Hyperactivity
- Stealing
- Lying
- Destructive Behavior
- Self-Injurious Behavior
- Whining
- Classroom Conduct Problems
- Low Self-Esteem
- Sad Mood
- Perfectionism
- Developmental Delays
- Anxiety
- Postdivorce Adjustment
- Bonding in Blended Families
4Steps in PCIT
- Step 1 Pretreatment Assessment of Child
and Family Functioning and
Feedback - Step 2 Teaching Behavioral Play Therapy
Skills - Step 3 Coaching Behavioral Play Therapy
Skills - Step 4 Teaching Discipline Skills
5Steps in PCIT cont.
- Step 5 Coaching Discipline Skills
- Step 6 Posttreatment Assessment of
Child and Family Functioning and
Feedback - Step 7 Boosters
- (Information on steps and session content
gathered from Hembree-Kigin McNeil, 1995)
6Session 1 - Intake
- Children are encouraged to play in the room
during the interview. Parents are told that the
therapist will be watching during this time and
the parents are to manage the childs behavior as
they would normally - Therapists are paying attention to how the child
plays independently, strategies the child uses to
get the parents attention, parental responsivity
to child overtures, parental limit-setting,
warmth of parent-child interactions, and evidence
of clinging and/or separation anxiety - Therapists do not intervene during this time but
encourage the parents to manage the childs
behavior as best they can
7Session 1 - Intake
- When conducting observations, it is advantageous
to collect information in the childs school
setting to get a more complete view of the child - It is also helpful to conduct observations on
separate days at different time periods - If PCIT is recommended, course of treatment is
described to the family, emphasizing the ways in
which PCIT can address the specific concerns
brought to them in treatment and any additional
concerns that may have been brought up - Goal is to get parents excited about treatment
and establish expectations that PCIT will require
active involvement on their part - An overview of PCIT is described with emphasis on
the behavioral play therapy and discipline
components
8Session 2 Teaching Behavioral Play Therapy
9Session 2 Teaching Behavioral Play Therapy
10Behavioral Targets for Strategic Attention and
Selective Ignoring
- Strategically Attend to
- Polite manners
- Gentle play
- Staying seated at a table
- Talking softly
- Helping, being nice to people
- Sharing toys
- Trying even when it is hard
- Selectively Ignore
- Bossiness, demandingness
- Banging toy on table
- Leaving seat during play
- Whining
- Yelling
- Grabbing toys away
- Giving up in frustration
11Session 2 Teaching Behavioral Play Therapy
(Did you practice play therapy for five minutes?)
12Session 3 Coaching Behavioral Play Therapy
Skills
- Criteria for Mastery of Behavioral Play Therapy
Skills - During five-minute play session
- Give 25 to 50 descriptions plus reflections
- Reflect nearly all appropriate child
verbalizations - Give 15 or more praises, at least 8 of which are
labeled praises - Ignore all negative, attention-seeking behaviors
- No critical statements
- No commands
- No questions
13Session 4 Teaching Discipline Skills
- Parents will teach their child to mind by
establishing small minding goals - While playing with toys, the parent gives the
child easy to follow instructions (e.g., put the
eyes on Mr. Potato Head, place a block on top of
another) - The child receives praise and the opportunity to
continue playing if they follow instructions and
a negative consequence if they do not follow
instructions - As small compliance goals are reached the child
is provided with more challenging tasks (e.g.,
doing things that they dont want to do,
performing a boring or less interesting task)
14Session 4 Teaching Discipline Skills
- Giving Effective Instructions
15Session 4 Teaching Discipline Skills
- Key points to time-out
- Avoid talking to the child on the way to time-out
and any other verbalizations and other forms of
attention while the child is in time-out - Time-out does not end until the original
instruction is obeyed - If child refuses to comply with original
direction they will return to time-out - If child complies with the original direction
after going through time-out it is best for the
parent to simply acknowledge that the child
complied with the initial request and avoid
praising the child
16Session 5 Coaching Discipline Skills
- Combining play therapy and discipline skills
- After child has been praised for obeying first
command, parents are instructed to return to play
therapy and avoid giving further instructions for
a few minutes - This play therapy serves to reinforce child for
compliance, decrease anger from being required to
mind, and helps parents remain calm - Every three to five minutes another instruction
is provided - The parent is gradually given more responsibility
throughout the session and the demands placed on
the child are gradually increased
17Session 6 Posttreatment Assessment of Child
and Family
- To enhance long-term maintenance of parenting
skills and child behavioral improvements a
schedule of booster sessions is developed - Number and frequency of sessions depends on
presence of family stressors, degree of family
and community support for using PCIT skills,
cognitive ability and psychological functioning
of parent, level of posttreatment skills mastery,
and parental dependency on the therapist - Usually recommended that families participate in
1 month, 3 month, 6 month, and 1 year booster
sessions