“MI Preparation Prayer”

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Using Motivational Interviewing To Enhance Engagement PCCYFS Thursday, April 14 8:30 - 10:00 Dave Vactor Christy Pfleger

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Using Motivational Interviewing To Enhance Engagement PCCYFS Thursday, April 14 8:30 - 10:00 Dave Vactor Christy Pfleger. “MI Preparation Prayer”. Guide me to be a patient companion To listen with a heart as open as the sky Grant me vision to see through her eyes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of “MI Preparation Prayer”

Page 1: “MI Preparation Prayer”

Using Motivational Interviewing To Enhance Engagement

PCCYFSThursday, April 14

8:30 - 10:00

Dave VactorChristy Pfleger

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“MI Preparation Prayer”Guide me to be a patient companion

To listen with a heart as open as the skyGrant me vision to see through her eyes

And eager ears to hear her storyCreate a safe and open mesa on which we may walk together

Make me a clear pool in which she may reflectGuide me to find in her your beauty and wisdom

Knowing your desire for her to be in harmony-healthy, loving, strongLet me honor and respect her choosing of her own path

And bless her to walk it freelyMay I know once again that although she and I are different

Yet there is a peaceful place where we are one-Bill Miller, co-founder of MI

Rollnick and Miller 1995

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Purpose • Provide an overview of the process of

change and basic MI skills

• Explore how to use MI skills to effectively engage clients

• Learn strategies to help clients tap into their motivation for change

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So What Exactly is MI?Definition:• A perspective that views a client as the most influential

agent of change and aims to empower the client to actively engage in the process of change.

• A method or approach, not a technique, that is not based on a singular theory.

• “A directive, client-centered counseling style for eliciting behavior change by helping clients explore and resolve ambivalence.”-Rollnick and Miller, 1995

Rollnick and Miller 2006

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History • MI was developed in 1983 by Bill Miller

for use with substance abuse clients.– Empirical data has been collected for use of

MI treatment with: drug and alcohol abuse, smoking cessation, psychiatric disorders, HIV related risk behaviors, diet and exercise.

– Note: These effects did not diminish over time.

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Beliefs Essential to the MI process• Person-Centered (closely linked to Rogerian

Theory)• Resistance to change and ambivalence are

natural human processes• Lack of motivation=unresolved ambivalence• Negative feelings/experiences can inhibit change• Change occurs when it is connected to something

of importance and value

• The client needs to show you the reason for change in order to proceed successfully (“change talk”)

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Identifying “Change Talk”

•What people say and how they talk about change is important.

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Defensiveness = Change

Confrontation = Change

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Confidence and Self-Efficacy

• When people and service providers believe that change can happen, it is more likely it will happen.

• Self-efficacy= hope

• Empathy facilitates change

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Miller & Rollnick’s“Spirit of MI”

•Motivation to change is elicited from the client and not imposed from without

•It is the clients task, not the counselor’s , to articulate and resolve their ambivalence

•The therapeutic relationship is more like a partnership or companionship than expert/recipient roles

Rollnick and Miller 2006

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Approach

• Direct persuasion is not an effective method for resolving ambivalence

• The counseling style is generally a quiet and eliciting one

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Approach, continued

•The counselor is directive in helping the client to examine and resolve ambivalence

•Readiness to change is a not a client trait, but fluctuating product of interpersonal interaction

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Three Key Components

• Collaborate (Partner)

• Evocation (Draw Out)

• Autonomy (Stand on own)

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Identifying “Change Talk”

• Disadvantages of status quo

• Advantages of change

• Optimism

• Intention to change

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What is Unique about MI?• MI is Directive• Client-Centered= focused on client’s interest and

concerns• Do not teach new skill, alter thought patterns

or look to the past• MI is a method of communication

• Not something we do to, but we are with and for clients

• Change is not forced or imposed (i.e., through punishment, pressure, financial gain)

• The client is the expert

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Wheel of Change• Motivational Interviewing and the Trans-

theoretical model to change – developed separately but synchronously.

• Trans-theoretical model of change is used to breakdown the concept of readiness to change into stages.

• Use the Wheel of Change to assess what MI strategies to use for forward movement.

Prochaska, Di Clemente and Norcross, 1992

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Wheel of Change

Prochaska, Di Clemente and Norcross, 1992

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Stages of Change

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Phase I – Address Ambivalence

• Pre-Contemplation

• Contemplating

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Phase II Address Change/Changing Action

• Preparation

• Action

• Maintenance

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Using MI with the Stages of Change

• Each stage contains certain helping behaviors that are particularly constructive

• Assist in measuring/gauging• Readiness• Confidence• Motivation

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Instead of asking “Why isn't this person motivated?” ask “What is

this person motivated by?”

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Traps• Question-Answer

– prevents discussion from getting to a deeper level• Taking Sides

– encourages client to argue more for their current perspective

• Expert– change is more effective when it comes from within,

not without• Labeling• Premature Focus

– increases defensiveness, decreases chances for long-term success

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Resistance Behaviors

• Arguing

• Interrupting

• Denying

• Ignoring

• Overt compliance/Covert defiance

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Skills• Get Permission• Drawing from past successes• Scaling• Imagine ideal future and change needed to get there• Extremes-worst and best possible outcomes of change• Scaling

Mandated Clients:• Acknowledge mandate• Provide choices• Empathize with lack of choice

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Principles

• Express Empathy

• Develop Discrepancies

• Roll with Resistance

• Support Self-Efficacy

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How to Make it Work

• Express empathy- reference listening, reflective listening

• Develop discrepancies – bring client on board with the importance for change, by highlighting differences

• Between current behavior and personal values

• Have the person argue for change

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Rolling with Resistance

• Accept it

• Respect it

• Flow with it

• “Roll with it” rather than oppose it

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Supporting Self-Efficacy

• Empowering the client to be the change agent

• Have confidence in his/her ability

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Elements of a Change Plan

• Goals

• Reasons

• Steps

• Support

• Obstacles

• Signs of Progress

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How to Use Skill (OARS)

• Ask open ended questions

• Affirm

• Reflective Listening

• Summarizing

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ReferencesBaer, J.S., Garrett .S.B., Beadnell, B,Wells E.A, & Peterson P.L., (2007).

Brief Motivational Intervention With Homeless Adolescents: Evaluating Effects on Substance Use and Service Utilization, Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 21, 582-586.

Burke B.L., Arkowitz. H & Menchola. M., (2003). The Efficacy of Motivational Interviewing: A Meta-Analysis of Controlled Clinical Trials Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 21, 843-861.

Miller, W. R., & Rollnick, S.,(1995). What is motivational interviewing? Behavioral and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 23, 325-334.

Miller, W. R., & Rollnick, S., (2002). Motivational interviewing: Preparing people for change (2nd ed.) New York: Guilford Press.

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Petrocellim, J.V., (2002). Process and change: counseling with the transtheoretical model of change, Journal of Counseling and Development, 80, 22-28.

Russell .C.R., Motivational Interviewing training for new trainers., (2002). The Motivational Interviewing Network of Trainers.

Wagner,C, Ingersoll, C. (2008). Beyond cognition: broadening the emotional, base of motivational Interviewing Journal of Psychotherapy. Integration and American Psychological Association 18, 191–206.

Wiles, M.,(2005). Motivational interviewing: overcoming client resistance to change. Cross Country Education Inc.

Zuckoff, A., & Daley, D. C., (1999). Improving Treatment Compliance: Counseling & Systems Strategies for Substance Abuse & Dual Disorders.