Motivational Interviewing - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Motivational Interviewing

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Title: Motivational Interviewing


1
Motivational Interviewing
  • The Basics

2
Clinician role Persuasion
  • Explain why s/he should make this change
  • Give 3 specific benefits of making the change
  • Tell him/her how to change
  • Emphasize importance of the change
  • Tell the client to do it!

3
Debrief
  • Readiness is not static
  • Importance of matching strategies to readiness
  • Role of Ambivalence

4
Ambivalence
  • Is normal
  • Occurs throughout the change process
  • Reflects costs and benefits of change and status
    quo
  • Is uncomfortable
  • May become chronic
  • Resolved by client

5
Righting Reflex
  • Born of concern and caring
  • Theres a problem? Lets fix it!
  • Fails to consider ambivalence in change process
  • May engender resistance

6
Therapeutic Traps
  • Question-Answer Trap
  • Trap of Taking Sides
  • Expert Trap
  • Labeling Trap
  • Premature Focus Trap
  • Blaming Trap

7
  • Talk about something real that you
  • Want to change
  • Need to change
  • Should change
  • Have been thinking about changing
  • But, havent yet changed.
  • Not your deepest, darkest secret!
  • Listen carefully - goal to understand the dilemma
  • Ask these four questions
  • Why would you want to make this change?
  • How might you go about it, in order to succeed?
  • What are the three best reasons to do it?
  • On a scale of 1-10, how important would you say
    it is to make this change? And why are you a ___
    and not zero?

8
Change
  • Change is more similar than different across
    behaviors
  • Change is a process that is continuous like a
    dimmer switch, not discrete like an on/off switch
  • Change depends on MOTIVATION which is a state not
    a trait. Its a probability, a likelihood.
  • Because of this, there are multiple ways and
    times that change can derail
  • Fortunately, there are multiple ways and times to
    facilitate the process

9
Stages of ChangeProchaska DiClemente
10
Stages of Change Model
Precontemplation Awareness of need to change,
increased concern
Contemplation Increasing the Pros for Change and
decreasing the Cons, Confidence
Preparation Commitment Planning
Relapse and Recycling
Maintenance Integrating Change into Lifestyle
Action Implementing and Revising the Plan
11
Processes of Change
Activities initiated or experienced by an
individual in modifying thinking feeling and
behavior related to a particular problem
COGNITIVE/EXPERIENTIAL BEHAVIORAL Consciousness
Raising Self-Liberation
Self-Revaluation Counter-conditionin
g Environmental Reevaluation Stimulus
Control Arousal/Dramatic Relief Contingency-
Management Social Liberation

12
To Sum Up
  • Change is continuous
  • This continuity can be broken up into stages
  • Assessment is about getting a sense of stage
  • People rely on change process to move through
    stages
  • Counselors can help and hinder
  • Multiple spirals are the rule
  • Motivation is the fuel

13
Motivation
  • The probability of engaging in and maintaining a
    behavior over time.
  • What are the three key words?
  • Probability (0 1) not (0 or 1).
  • Engage
  • Maintain
  • Motivation is continuous not dichotomous
  • Fluctuating motivation can increase or decrease
    based on your behavior

14
Factors Influencing Motivation
  • Client Factors
  • Health
  • Perseverance/Task Persistence
  • Task difficulty
  • Belief in the efficacy of the program
  • Interest level
  • Importance
  • Confidence
  • External barriers
  • Values
  • Counselor Factors
  • Much The Same.

15
Motivational Interviewing A Definition
  • MI is a collaborative, goal oriented style of
    communication with particular attention to the
    language of change. It is designed to strengthen
    personal motivation for and commitment to a
    specific goal by eliciting and exploring the
    persons own reasons for change within an
    atmosphere of acceptance and compassion.
  • http//www.motivationalinterview.org/

16
Spirit of MI
  • Autonomy
  • Personal responsibility
  • Neither imposition nor coercion
  • Collaboration
  • Meeting of aspirations
  • Neither exhortation nor persuasion
  • Evocation
  • Drawing out
  • Neither instilling nor installing

17
MI Principles
  • Express Empathy
  • Empathy alone is predictive of change
  • Roll w/Resistance
  • Verbal judo
  • Develop Discrepancy
  • Goals and values contrasted with current behavior
  • Support Self-Efficacy
  • R Resist the righting reflex
  • U Understand you clients motivation
  • L Listen to you client
  • E Empower your client

18
MI Fundamental Processes
  • These are the phases of the overall process of
    engaging in MI with a client. These phases are
    not rigid and we often move back and forth
    between the phases as we work with clients.
  • Engaging The Relational Foundation
  • Focusing The Strategic Focus
  • Evoking The Meat and Potatoes
  • Planning The Bridge to Change
  • Often MI is about knowing how to skillfully and
    artfully move back and forth between each process

19
How Does MI Work
  • Empathy allows clients to reduce resistance and
    resolve ambivalence
  • Looking at the situation from their perspective
  • People feel understood less resistant
  • Selective reinforcement of change talk
  • Focus on change talk
  • We learn what we believe when we hear ourselves
    speak
  • Therapist reinforces change talk that is
    consistent with therapeutic goals (persons
    values)
  • Reinforcement further increases change talk and
    allows of client to experience build in
    motivation to change

20
Empathic Counseling Style and Patient
ResponseMiller, Benefield Tonigan (1993) JCCP
61 455-461
21
Change Talk
  • Client utterances that favor change, are linked
    to a specific behavior(s), come from client (in
    most cases), and are in the present tense.
  • Preparatory Language (DARN)
  • Desire
  • I want
  • Ability
  • Im able
  • Reasons (for change)
  • Heres why
  • Need (disadvantages of status quo)
  • If I dont

22
Change Talk
  • Implementing Language (ACT)
  • Activation (prepared, willing)
  • Commitment
  • Im going to
  • I will
  • I plan to
  • Taking Steps
  • I did
  • I went
  • I started
  • It is the change in this talk over the course of
    the session that predicts change

23
Commitment Language Pattern A
24
Outcomes for Pattern A Group
25
Commitment Language Pattern B
Amrhein et al., Journal of Consulting Clinical
Psychology 2003 71862-878
26
Outcomes for Pattern B Group
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