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ParentChild Interaction Therapy PCIT

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Abusive men often attack women's ability to mother, the one thing women try to preserve ... Hitting - Kicking -Tantrums -Not listening - Argumentative - Over ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ParentChild Interaction Therapy PCIT


1
Parent-Child Interaction Therapy(PCIT)
  • The Relationship/Discipline Components
  • Naomi Perry, MSW
  • Harborview Center for Sexual Assault and
    Traumatic Stress
  • 206-521-1800
  • November 14, 2006

2
Children and Violence
  • Family violence
  • Between 25 and 30 of American women are beaten
    at least once in the course of intimate
    relationships
  • 95 of reported cases of domestic violence
    involve a male batterer and female victim
  • Based on one study, children were present in 81
    of the households when the domestic violence
    occurred
  • 48 of these children were under the age of 5
    years
  • Fartuzzo, J., Boruch, R., Berjama, A., et al.
    Domestic Violence andchildrenPrevalence and risk
    in five major U.S. Cities. Journal of the
    American Academy of Child and Adolescent
    Psychiatry (1997) 36116-22

3
The Mothers Responsibility
  • Women are considered responsible for the
    well-being and safety of their children AND for
    mediating the relationships between children and
    fathers
  • However, these responsibilities are exercised in
    a context of relative powerlessness in terms of
    adult familial relationships

4
Violence in the Family Impacts Roles
  • Abusive men often attack womens ability to
    mother, the one thing women try to preserve
  • Mothering is centered not around what is best for
    the child, but around efforts to limit further
    harm to themselves or their children
  • Externally controlled motherhood
  • Insisting the children are quiet keeping toys
    out of sight, sending the children to bed early
    so they are not targeted for criticism (or
    worse), hitting or shouting at children before
    the father did, since the harm would be less

5
What is Domestic Violence?
  • Definition of Domestic Violence
  • Abuse by a caregiver, a parent, a spouse or an
    intimate partner
  • The goal of domestic violence is to establish and
    maintain power and control
  • Physical abuse
  • Use of physical force
  • Sexual abuse
  • Any forced sexual activity
  • Emotional abuse
  • Threats, constant criticism and put-downs,
    controlling access to money and controlling
    activities

6
What is Exposure to Domestic Violence?
  • Definition of exposure to domestic violence
  • Watching or hearing violent events
  • Direct involvement
  • attempting to intervene calling the police
  • Experiencing the aftermath
  • Seeing bruises/other injuries
  • Observing maternal depression

7
Definition of Exposure to Domestic Violence
  • Being within sight or sound of the violence
  • Examples
  • Hitting or threatening a child while in his or
    her mothers arms
  • Taking the child hostage in order to force the
    mothers return to the home
  • Using a child as a physical weapon against the
    victim
  • Forcing the child to watch assaults against the
    mother or to participate in the abuse
  • Using the child as a spy or interrogating him or
    her about the mothers activities

8
What We Know About The Relationship Between
Domestic Violence and Children
  • 50 of residents in battered womens shelters are
    children
  • Almost 80 of women in shelters are accompanied
    by one or more children
  • Arizona Coalition Against Domestic Violence,
    1999

9
What We Know About The Relationship Between
Domestic Violence and Children
  • Historically, children were considered
    secondary victims of domestic violence and
    therefore were not primary targets of service
    interventions
  • Children in battered womens shelters appear to
    have more health problems than do children in the
    general population, and therefore a greater need
    for medical attention

10
The Facts..
  • Between 45 and 70 of children exposed to
    domestic violence are also the victims of
    physical abuse
  • Children in households with domestic violence
    were also found to be at higher risk for sexual
    abuse than were children in nonviolent households
  • Exposure to domestic violence produces different
    developmental problems at different ages

11
Behavioral Therapy Approach
  • Parent Child Interaction Therapy
  • Provides structure, predictability, and
    consistency in the parent child role
  • Develops creativity and encourages curiosity,
    exploration, discovery, pleasure, repetition, and
    mastery
  • PCIT is an experience between the parent and the
    child, and EXPERIENCE changes the relationship
    between parent and child!

12
A Childs Confusion
  • Children grow up expecting their mothers to
    fulfill their needs, care for and protect them
  • They do not understand, in the context of
    domestic violence, why their mother are unable to
    do this

13
Based on Developmental Theory
  • Nurturance and firm limits with young children
    are both necessary for healthy adolescent
    outcomes
  • PCIT draws from both attachment and social
    learning theory to achieve authoritative parenting

14
Purpose of Assessment
  • Helps us understand the unique problems of each
    family
  • Allows us to decide if PCIT may be of help for
    these problems
  • Guides us in choosing treatment techniques for
    each session
  • Permits evaluation of our effectiveness

15
Inclusion Criteria for Child
  • Child is between 2 to 7 years old (other ages
    dependent on circumstances)

16
Inclusion Criteria for Child
  • Caregiver (foster parent, relative, etc.) are
    willing to participate in the service

17
Inclusion Criteria for Child
  • The bond between the parent and child needs to be
    improved

18
Inclusion Criteria for Child
  • Child is displaying problem behaviors such as
    physical and/or verbal aggression such as
  • Hitting - Kicking -Tantrums -Not listening -
    Argumentative - Over activity - Poor social
    skills

19
Inclusion Criteria for Child
  • There are
  • Significant conflict in parent-child relationship
  • Significant classroom or daycare problems

20
Inclusion Criteria for Parent
  • Parents lack necessary parenting skills
  • Parents need to learn appropriate discipline
    methods
  • Bond between the parent and child needs to
    improve
  • Child in the home meets age criteria
  • For reunification, there must be parent/child
    visitation 3 or more times per week and a formal
    plan to return home in place

21
Exclusion Criteria Checklist
  • Outside of 2 to 7 year old range (will be
    considered on a case by case basis)
  • Pervasive development disorder in child or adult
    (such as autism)
  • There is no plan to return the child to the home

22
Exclusion Criteria Checklist
  • There is on-going, serious domestic violence in
    the home
  • Participating caregiver has a severe untreated
    mental illness (such as schizophrenia, active
    psychosis, etc)
  • Parents sexually offended against child

23
We Want to know if.
  • Requested services are
  • Home based PCIT
  • Clinic based PCIT
  • Child resides
  • At home
  • In foster care or relative placement
  • ( Of months already in placement)
  • Permanency plan
  • Terminate Parental rights
  • Return to home
  • Adoption

24
The Parent Interview
  • Provides information about the childs problem
    behaviors useful for tailoring treatment goals
  • Gives us information about the history of these
    problems
  • Allows the therapist to understand family
    structure, routines, and discipline strategies

25
Parent Factors
  • Parent factors
  • Sees child as intentionally disruptive or
    disobedient
  • Childs positive and negative behaviors
    misperceived
  • Focuses on negative behaviors ignore positive
    behaviors

26
Parent Factors
  • Parent factors
  • More physical punishment as a means of control
  • More punitive strategies, fewer reasoning
    strategies
  • Rely heavily on power-assertion techniques
  • Less emotional interaction
  • (J.S. Miller C. Chilamurti, 1991)

27
Child Factors
  • Child factors
  • Aggressive, anti-social, under-controlled
  • More negative verbalizations, less social
    interactions
  • Temper tantrums

28
Purpose of Child Directed Interaction (CDI) Play
  • Purpose of CDI
  • Helps children feel safe and calm
  • Helps parent to feel better towards child
  • Teaches parent how to communicate/play with their
    child
  • Teaches parent how to teach child
  • Improves self-esteem
  • Improves social skills
  • Results in warm, secure relationship

29
Treatment Goals
  • Decrease aggressive behavior by 75 which will be
    monitored by parent report and observation in
    session
  • Increase pro-social skills (e.g., sharing, turn
    taking) by 75 which will be monitored by parent
    report and observation in session

30
CHILDREN BY NATURE
ALREADY KNOW
HOW TO PLAY
31
PCIT IS AN EVIDENCED BASED TREATMENT PROGRAM
THAT TEACHES PARENTS
HOW TO SUCCESSFULLY
ENJOY THEIR CHIIDS PLAY
32
Its not easy to be a parent period!Its
especially not easy to be a single parent.
33
A child who is hyperactive, impulsive,
inattentive, aggressive, demanding and
temperamental
  • can increase daily stress and make some parents
    angry and regretful of their parenting decisions!

34
Teaching the Basic Rule
  • FOLLOW
  • THE
  • CHILDS
  • LEAD

35
THE DONT RULES
  • Commands
  • Commands lead the behaviors
  • Risk negative interaction
  • Questions
  • Often hide commands
  • Takes the lead from the child
  • Can suggest disapproval
  • Can suggest caregiver is not listening
  • Criticism
  • Points out mistakes rather than correcting them
  • Lowers self-esteem
  • Creates unpleasant interactions

36
THE DONT RULES
  • make me sad
  • shut me down
  • lowers my self-esteem
  • makes me angry
  • escalates my negative behaviors
  • brings out oppositional behaviors in me
  • No, Dont, Stop, Quit and Not

37
CDI DO RULESARE THE P-R-I-D-E SKILLS
38
Child Directed Interaction (CDI)
  • Relationship Enhancement Overview
  • DO RULES
  • Praise
  • Reflection
  • Imitation
  • Description
  • Enthusiasm
  • P-R-I-D-E

39
Coaching PCIT
40
Effectiveness Of CDI The Relationship Component
  • Childs behaviors decrease by 75
  • Children genuinely become more eager to please
    the parent
  • Parents feel more confident
  • Childs self-esteem improves
  • Oppositional children become less angry
  • Childs attention span increases
  • Bottom line The family is happier

41
(No Transcript)
42
  • STOP

43
  • Questions
  • Commands
  • Critical talk

44
GO
45
Increase use of..
  • P. R. I. D. E
  • r e m e n
  • a f I s t
  • I l t c h
  • s e a r u
  • e c t I s
  • t I p I
  • I o t a
  • o n I s
  • n o m
  • n

46
PARENT DIRECTED INTERACTION (PDI)
  • THE
  • DISCIPLINE
  • COMPONENT

47
PARENT DIRECTED INTERACTION (PDI)
  • Parents lead the activity
  • Contingency management
  • Limit-setting
  • Problem solving
  • Reasoning

48
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
BE DIRECT
  • The first step in getting compliance is to Be
    Direct with the child. Being direct helps
    children understand exactly how you expect them
    to behave.

49
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
  • B
  • E
  • D
  • I
  • R
  • E
  • C
  • T

50
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
B
  • E Specific with your commands
  • Make commands specific rather than vague

51
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
  • Very command positively stated
  • Continue to avoid using
  • NO
  • DONT
  • STOP
  • QUIT
  • NOT!

E
E
52
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
  • evelopmentally Appropriate
  • Give developmentally appropriate commands
  • Each childs age and maturity level is unique, so
    it is important to have different expectations
    for younger and older children

D
53
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
  • ndividual rather than compound
  • Instructions should be provided one at a time,
    rather than stringing several commands together

I
54
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
R
  • espectful and polite
  • Start most instructions with the word please

55
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
  • ssential commands only
  • Commands should be essential and noncompliance
    followed through with consequences

E
56
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
  • hoices when appropriate
  • Giving children the opportunity to make choices
    can help them to become independent
  • you can either wear the red shirt or the green
    shirt to school

C
57
Parent-Directed Interaction (PDI)
  • one of voice is neutral
  • Commands should be given in a firm and a matter
    of fact voice

T
58
Practicing 'Minding'
  • Tell the child what to do instead of asking
  • Avoid repeating commands
  • Commands should be positively stated
  • Give instructions one at a time
  • Avoid vague commands (e.g., Straighten up)

59
PCIT DOESNT SAY
ITS OUR WAY OR ITS NO WAY
60
THE MISSION
INCREASE THE PARENTS GOAL TO
STOP THE WALKING/TALKING CYCLE OF ABUSE
61
Effectiveness of PDIThe Discipline Component
  • Teaches the parent the need for consistency,
    predictability and follow-through
  • Teaches the parent to give good (effective)
    commands
  • Teaches the parent how to give an effective
    consequence for non-compliance
  • Teaches a safe and easy, but effective, time-out
    procedure

62
Referrals
  • Who can be referred to PCIT?
  • Parents of children ages 2 7 year olds
  • Older/Younger if minor adaptations are made
  • Parents with poor parenting skills and/or history
    of physical and/or verbal abuse of their children
  • Parents of children with oppositional, defiant,
    non-compliant behaviors
  • Single or two-parent homes

63
Referrals
  • Who Can be referred to PCIT?
  • Grandparents and/or significant extended family
    members in caretaker roles
  • Foster care parents
  • Court ordered
  • Parents and children exposed to domestic violence
    but not actively living in domestic violence

64
THANK YOU
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