VIGNETTES
Case
Study one:
You
have an appointment with a new client, Mark, who has booked in for
smoking cessation. Your client, Mark, enters the practice and
you engage in small talk about how he travelled there and you
notice there is no eye contact as he continues to look down most
of the time. The conversation then turns to the reason for his
visit and what you may be able to help them with and the reply
comes back, “I don’t really see the point anymore, I am too
tired to carry on”, or “everyone would be better off if I was
not here”.
When
asked how long the client has been feeling this way, it transpires
that his wife recently left him and she has begun divorce
proceedings. It is likely to be a prolonged battle over assets and
child access. He volunteers that he feels he has not slept well
for weeks and is alternating between being tearful and
irrationally angry.
Discuss
how would you deal with this client and any associated issues.
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(Student
answer here) Ideas how you would proceed i.e. suitable
intervention, ethical complexity, referral etc.
In
order to work with Mark at this point I would be honest and open
and I would question whether stopping smoking at this time is
actually desirable or achievable in the light of what he has told
me. Ideally I would see if he would consider continuing the
session on a different subject- one in which the other issues he
is experiencing could be explored and if he would consider a
future session. If he is agreeable to this I would explore what
areas he would like to work with – bearing in mind that I would
also be concerned about the comments he has made about being “too
tired to carry on” and “ everyone would be better off if I was
not here.” I would ask Mark if he has been in contact with his
GP and ensuring that I have contact details for his GP. Agreement
to a future session and seeing his GP might help to allay some of
my fears but if these increased to a stage at which I was
concerned about his or others safety I would contact his GP and if
necessary the Police and report my concerns as an issue of
safeguarding and protection. This is especially important if he
has access to his children or expresses anything that would cause
alarm –whilst not wanting to be alarmist a man going through a
relationship break-up with fears about custody and expressing
these views may be more likely to consider harming their family.
If
Mark and I were able to establish areas to work on and were able
to develop rapport, I would aim to work with confidence, control
over anger and increased feelings of self-esteem. I would
establish areas in which he does have some control and methods in
which he has established control previously. I would be looking to
move him from the top down global approach into a more focussed
look at the areas within his life – what is important and how he
can use his own resources to create this. It may be that sleep is
another area that could be examined – the impact of having a
good nights sleep after which he can feel rested and ready to
address the issues which are coming. The content of the
meta-analysis would dictate the method used but it should include
future pacing where he is able to experience positivity and
change.
During the
session I would be paying close attention to Mark’s responses
and reported changes/experience. I would be booking the next
session and ensuring that Mark was aware of the ways in which to
contact me if required.
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Tutor
feedback (DO NOT delete/edit feedback. Write amendments,
additional information & thoughts underneath this table)
Correct.
I am pleased you will take this approach if a client confides
such things and that this would trigger such response from you.
Whilst there are many who would shirk the responsibility, passing
the client on to others or flatly refusing treatment, I am
confident and pleased that there are now therapists such as
yourself who have the ability to help effectively in such
circumstances and take the necessary steps. We at Unity thank
all ‘unwanted behaviours’ that bring a client through the
door. After all, referring back to secondary and tertiary gains,
the smoking behaviour (like other behaviours the conscious mind
suddenly deems unfavourable) are serving some important purpose in
the client’s life and merely ‘taking the dummy away’,
particular at times like these, is maybe not advisable.
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Further example answer:
VIGNETTES
I
personally would not normally work with a stop smoking client.
Having
obtained a good level of rapport I would use meta-questioning get the
client to expand on their opening comments to establish a better
understanding of the client's current frame of mind as well as
identifying the right steps to assist him in the
best way possible.
I
would look towards gaining permission to work with the client on his
other issues rather than the smoking during this session, I would
inform the client I felt stopping smoking at this time unproductive
due to all the other issues currently in his life, as I would
consider them more important.
If
the client is agreeable to continuing with this new direction of the
session I would want to work with his self-esteem and confidence
issues as well as stress release as he appears to be struggling with
these at this time and assisting with his poor sleep issues, which
should have a beneficial effect on him generally.
Utilising
the Control Room to adjust his Subjective Levels of Discomfort and
directing his sub-conscious mind to resolve his stress related issues
as best as possible with a strongly anchored quality sleep suggestion
incorporating Reframing of his future, possibly utilising Parts
Therapy if I discovered it to be appropriate during the
meta-questioning.
I
would request the client had at least another session preferably
within a week to monitor and support them whilst ensuring sustained
progress.
I
would closely monitor his behavioural changes (both during the
session and after) to make an informed decision as to the next step.
I
would strongly consider the client's true intent, bearing in mind his
comments of “too tired to carry on” and “ everyone would be
better off if I was not here”, should I consider these statements
to be more than a throwaway comment I would try and persuade the
client to contact his GP and discuss how he is feeling, if I felt it
necessary I would contact the GP myself to report my concerns as
required under the Code of Ethics.
A
good assessment of the situation here and a clear and concise plan of
action both of progressing with the therapy session and the various
implications. Though there really are no right or wrong answers
here, it is a good approach, as you say, to avoid dealing with the
smoking cessation at this initial stage, when it may be a supportive
mechanism necessary to his well being at present.
VIGNETTES
Case
Study two:
Mary
arrives at your practice for help losing weight. In your
pre-talk she comments angrily about the behaviour of her nine year
old son, Josh, who never does anything she asks. She has been a
lone parent for over a year since the break-up of her relationship
which she blamed on Josh’s bad behaviour. She says she is at
her wits’ end and does not understand why he is so badly
behaved. She admitted that he angered her so much one night that
she even threw an empty bottle in Josh’s direction when he
particularly upset her. As you ask about her eating habits etc she
volunteers that she and her son live on a diet of fast foods which
are delivered to the home as she never has time to shop or cook
properly because her job involves long hours, where she is not
home until late, and it is very stressful. She then tells you
that she cannot sleep unless she drinks at least a whole bottle of
wine every night.
Discuss
how would you deal with this client and any associated issues.
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(Student
answer here) Ideas how you would proceed i.e. suitable
intervention, ethical complexity, referral etc.
If
Mary were to discuss these issues with me I might assume that we
have developed a level of rapport. It is clear from what she has
said that there are issues other than weight loss and at this
stage I would be honest and open about this – it seems that
there are other areas which may be impacting. However I would also
accept that weight loss may be the area of her life in which Mary
has decided she may be able to assert some control. Ideally I
would see if she would consider continuing the session on a
different subject but by sensitively raising the issue it may be
that the focus changes anyway.
However
at the same time I would have significant concerns about Josh. I
would ensure that I have contact details for Mary’s GP and I
would be asking if she has been in touch with the GP and what
other areas of support she has (familial, Social Services,
school….). I would need to know who if anyone else is in the
house at night as drinking a bottle of wine every night may mean
that Mary is not in a position to be responsible for Josh. If my
concerns increased to being concerned about Josh’s or Mary’s
safety I would contact the GP and if necessary the Police and
report my concerns as an issue of safeguarding and protection.
In
order to work with Mary there are several areas in which she may
wish to address and which also may be intertwined. Alcohol and the
consumption of empty calories within alcohol may be addressed in
the guise of weight loss. She may wish to focus on sleep, anger
management, ways in which she can take control of areas of her
life…. The content of the meta-analysis would dictate the method
used but it should include future pacing where she is able to
experience responding differently to food and perhaps a future in
which she is able to eat healthily and the changes which would
need to take place for this to happen (planning, time, calmness..)
During
the session I would be paying close attention to Mary’s
responses and reported changes/experience. I would be booking the
next session and ensuring that she was aware of the ways in which
to contact me if required.
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Tutor
feedback (DO NOT delete/edit feedback. Write amendments,
additional information & thoughts underneath this table)
Correct.
You are right that a good level of rapport would have to be
established in order for these vital elements of the client
experience to be revealed. However, this is also an indication of
the severity of a problem – hence some folks who seem to tell
tales of their doom and gloom to almost anyone that will stand
still long enough; the lady in the post office or the guy trying
to sell her windows. In each case of course it is a cry for help
and how you respond to that is variable. It is a factor of the
business of hypnotherapy that people will come to see you under
the premise of ‘losing weight’ or stopping smoking etc and
whilst some serious professions see that in a negative light,
wishing we were called upon to treat more serious issues, it can
also be seen as a positive in that if they didn’t smoke or have
weight issues some clients would not walk through your door.
These are perhaps the same clients who would never think of
seeking professional help until some larger marker indicates that
they needed to. I appreciate also your understanding that the
weight control is maybe part of her life that she can learn to
exert some control. I go back to the days of watching
psychiatric patients do basket weaving and artwork and the
recognition if we can have control and creativity in some matter
of complexity then the ability to do that with basket weaving
deftly begins to flow into other areas of life where it is
necessary to respond with such abilities.
There
is also the question of blame frame. This is a big concern. It
is fundamental to her relationship with her son that this be
addressed. ‘when HE particularly upset her’ is a marker to
recognise that she maybe needs to be beyond this sort of upset.
If a child can so upset a parent that the parent turns to physical
violence, then the work is to deal with the parent’s reaction to
previously upsetting comments. The words and phrases and actions
of other people which result in an individual been driven to
violence are the keys and the vehicle to free them of further
upset. These triggers can return a client right the way back to a
moment of hurt when the partner or, indeed, THEIR parent said such
things. Regression happens spontaneously in such circumstances;
one could say that in the moment she threw the bottle she
regressed to a poignant moment in the past, so formal therapeutic
regression may be an answer.
In
summary, such revelations that the client makes that you are
privileged to hear and respond to are gifts handed to you on a
plate for you to craft your way into helping them and choosing
your interventions and overall approach. If you can test your
work afterwards by using the same triggers that the boy used ‘to
upset her’ and she is no longer upset or regressing to some past
pain, you have resolved the conflict. Weight control is perceived
by the public to be a long term issue, whereas smoking is still
thought to respond to the ‘one hit wonder’ approach which we
discourage. Therefore, there is opportunity to work with this
client by incorporating some weight control management techniques
into the first session (as it is the reason she has come to see
you) though also designing a four or six session plan to help her
with all related issues discussed above.
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Further Student Example Answer:
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(Student
answer here) Ideas how you would proceed i.e. suitable
intervention, ethical complexity, referral etc.
Again
I would not work with Weight Control Clients.
Having
obtained a good level of rapport I would use meta-questioning get
the client to expand on their opening comments to establish a
better understanding of their current frame of mind as well as
identifying the right steps to assist them in best way possible.
I
would look towards gaining permission to work with the client on
her other issues rather than the weight control during this
session, as I would consider them more important at this time.
If
the client is agreeable to continuing with this new direction of
the session I would want to work with stress release and anger
management as that appears to be the major issues at this time and
also assisting with her poor sleep pattern, which should have a
beneficial effect on her general life. I would consider use some
Ericksonian metaphors to work on her acceptance of her current
position as I would expect some issues around feeling guilty of
her behaviour towards her child which may help to move forward.
Utilising
the Control Room to identify and adjust her Subjective Levels of
Discomfort, directing her sub-conscious mind to resolve the stress
and anger related issues as best as possible with a strongly
anchored quality sleep suggestion incorporating Reframing of her
future, possibly utilising Parts Therapy or potentially Regression
Therapy if I discovered it to be appropriate during the
meta-questioning.
I
would request the client had further sessions with at least
another preferably within a week to monitor and support them
during this vulnerable stage whilst the on-going work would ensure
sustained progress.
I
would closely monitor any behavioural changes (both during the
session and after) to make an informed decision as to the next
step.
I
would try and persuade the client to contact her GP and discuss
both how she is feeling and possibly helping with her drinking
dependant on how dependant she believes she is on the alcohol, the
GP could also to identify any assistance there may be available
with a reference for her
to social services for greater support with bringing up a child
under these circumstances.
If
I felt it necessary I would contact the GP myself to report my
concerns as required under the Code of Ethics as her child is
potentially at risk of harm should her situation continue
un-changed or deteriorate further.
A
good approach and due consideration of the implications of this
complex therapeutic situation with a good regard not only for the
well being of the client, but for the child also. The therapeutic
structure of the session seems most appropriate and also the follow
up and timing of the other sessions. I particularly applaud your
recognition of the value of the sleep improvement as the initial step
toward an improved condition.
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Tutor
feedback (DO NOT delete/edit feedback. Write amendments,
additional information & thoughts underneath this table)
A
good approach and due consideration of the implications of this
complex therapeutic situation with a good regard not only for the
well being of the client, but for the child also. The
therapeutic structure of the session seems most appropriate and
also the follow up and timing of the other sessions. I
particularly applaud your recognition of the value of the sleep
improvement as the initial step toward an improved condition.
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