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Services Offered & Approach Used 1

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Page 1: Ctc General Pr

Services Offered & Approach Used

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Caplan Therapy Centre

Tom Caplan, MSW

Phone: 514-737-7208

Fax: 514-737-0497

eMail: [email protected]

Web: www.tomcaplanmsw.com

Web: www.needs-abc.com

5845 Cote des Neiges

Suite 440

Montreal, QC

H3S 1Z42

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Present Clinical Work Adjunct Professor at McGill S.W. School

McGill Domestic Violence Clinic

Research

Papers

Books

Designated DV Expert in the Quebec Court System

Private Practice

Approved AAMFT Clinical Supervisor

Caplan Therapy Centre

Montreal Anger Management Centre

McGill Domestic Violence Clinic

Clinical Training on Behaviour Management and the Needs ABC Model

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Caplan Therapy CentreCentre de Therapie Caplan English language men’s groups for anger management (including DV) French language women’s groups for anger management (including DV) McGill Domestic Violence Clinic

English services for men Support for women (during the school year)

Individual counselling Marriage and family therapy Christian counselling Jewish counselling Sex therapy Testing for school-aged children Workshops and trainings tailored to the needs of the resource:

Behaviour management Anger in the workplace Improving compliance in clients (O.T.’s, physios, M.D.’s, etc.) The Needs ABC intervention model Group work

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Professional Status of CTC All clinicians have a minimum of a Master’s level

degree

All are members of a professional order

All are trained in the Needs ABC Model as well as other accredited intervention models

Note: We are the only resource for Anger Management whose clinicians all are accredited by a professional order.

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Quest for the “Holy Grail” of Relational Therapy Looking for a better and more effective way of helping clients – individuals, couples and

families – to move forward with an improved quality of life together. This quest exists despite the brilliant approaches created by – but not limited to:

Jacobson Gottman Greenberg Johnson White Miller Rollnick Teyber De Shazer Ellis Glasser And others

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Have any of you presented?

So – How am “I“ feeling today?

What do I need to feel better?

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What I Have Learned All models have merit and can succeed or fail

depending upon the therapists style and/or personality

The best way to work on a problem is NOT to work on the problem

Individual client needs and feelings in relationships need to be defined and clarified

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Model[Needs ABC] This model is presently being used with problems such

as:

Substance abuse

Anger management - DV

Gambling

There are two parts to the model:

1. Determining a clients relational needs

2. Collaborating on strategies to get needs met productively with an eye on emotion

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1010

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Behaviour Management Treatment Goals?

The immediate cessation of all forms of inappropriate behaviour within and without the family or contextual setting.

Effective case management: if several professionals are involved in treating the client (s)

Creating and Maintaining Hope

Stages of Treatment Stage 1: Creating a Context for Change

Stage 2: Creatively Challenging Old Patterns and Expanding New Alternatives

Stage 3: Consolidation of New More Productive Behaviours Restoration of Positive Behaviours versus Retribution

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Needs ABC Approach Does all 3:

Creating a Context for Change (safety)

Supportively Challenges Old Patterns and Promotes New Alternatives to Problem-Solving through:

Consolidation of New More Productive Behaviours

Restoration of Positive Behaviours versus Retribution

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The Most Difficult JourneyThe most difficult journey of all is the distance between

two people.Author unknown – Perhaps a take off on the Victor Borge quote: “Laughter is the shortest

distance between two people.”

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Most Important Prognostic Factors

Common Factors associated with Psychotherapy Outcome “Extra-therapeutic” Factors (40%) - (e.g., safe and stable housing, secure employment,

adequate financial resources, positive interactions, supports in the community)

Therapeutic Alliance (30%) - (e.g., a health care provider’s non-judgmental attitude, warmth, respect and caring)

Placebo Effect / Expectancy (15%) – (MOTIVATION: a client’s sense of hope and expectation for recovery)

Therapy Model or Technique (15%) – (cognitive-behavioural therapy, mindfulness-based stress reduction, etc.)

Asay, T.P. and M.J. Lambert (1999) 'The Empirical Case for the Common Factors in Therapy: Quantitative Findings', in Hubble et al. (1999).

Bachelor, A. (1988) 'How Clients Perceive Therapist Empathy: A Content Analysis of 'Received' Empathy', Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice 25: 227-40.

Bordin, E.S. (1979) 'The Generalizability of the Psychoanalytic Concept of the Working Alliance', Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice 16(3): 252-60.Kitron, D. (2007). Psychoanalytic psychotherapy: The immeasurable profession. Psychoanalytic Review, 94(3), 463-473.

Bachelor, A. and A. Horvath (1999) 'The Therapeutic Relationship', in Hubble et al. (1999), pp. 133-78.

Krupnick, J.L. et al. (1996) 'The Role of the Therapeutic Alliance in Psychotherapy and Pharmacotherapy Outcome: Findings in the National Insitute of Mental Health Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program', Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 64: 532-39.

Lambert, M. J. & Barley, D. E. (2001). Research summary on the therapeutic relationship and psychotherapy outcome. Psychotherapy: Theory, Research, Practice, Training, Vol 38(4), 357-361.

Orlinsky, D., Grawe, K. and Parks, B. (1994) Process and outcome in psychotherapy: Noch einmal. in A. Bergin and S. Garfield (Eds). The Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change. (4th Ed) Toronto: Wiley.

The Heart & Soul of Change: What Works in Therapy (1999). M. Hubble, B. Duncan, S. Miller (Eds) . Washington DC: APA Press.

Weinberger, J. (2006). Common factors aren't so common: The common factors dilemma. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 2(1), 45-69

14www.needs-abc.com

Difficult to measure

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Therefore: Strengths of Model

The model helps clients to take responsibility by focusing on THEIR needs (not on others such as the partner, the employer , the system, etc.)

This model helps clients to feel understood and supported (joining)

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Needs Acquisition and Behaviour Change Model

An Integrated, Relational, Client-Focused Approach

to Therapy – using concepts also described in:

Cognitive-Behavioural / Motivational (Ellis 1997, Jacobsen 1995, Miller & Rollnick 1991)

Narrative (White 1990, Jenkins 1990, Avis-Myers 2004)

Solution Focused (De Shazer 1991, I.K. Berg 1993)

Emotion Focused (Greenberg & Johnson 1988, Greenberg & Pavio 1997)

Process-Oriented (Shulman 1992, Teyber, 2000, Caplan, 2005)

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Basic Assumption of the Model

It is the NEED (as described in the theme of a client’s narrative) that DRIVES the EMOTIONS.

It is EMOTION that DRIVES the BEHAVIOURS.

MEETING THE NEED – through appropriate behaviour – will result in EXTINGUISHING the inappropriate BEHAVIOUR.

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The Needs ABC Model’s Focus:

On Relational needs – NOT on client behaviours! (defensiveness - shame!)

On the emotions they predict when unmet

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The Needs ABC Model’s strategy:

Illuminate a client’s missing relational needs

Highlight emotions that are more relationally productive

Help clients to

communicate these needs productively; and/or

Acquire these needs more functionally

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Benefits of Using Model

It is a way of listening You can continue to use your own style and strategies, etc. You can integrate it with the model you are using.

It gives clients “answers” – something tangible to work with. You can “label” the client’s struggle Relational triggers are demystified

It helps to lead clients away from a “power struggle” and towards collaborative problem-solving.

The model transcends sexual, racial and cultural issues.

The model can also reduce anxiety for clients with Mental Health Issues.

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Interesting Quote They may forget what you said, but they will never

forget how you made them feel.

Carl Buchner

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Needs ABC Emotion Concepts

“Emotion Focus” Helping the client to understand their emotional possibilities.

“Emotion Conscious” Helping the clientto understand which emotions are moreuseful in problem-solving.

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Needs ABC Emotion Focus

Less “Useful” [productive] emotions tend todrive problematic behaviours and, as aresult, tend not to get our needs met.

More “Useful” [productive] emotions tend toexpose more appropriate options for satisfyingunmet needs.

Note: A “useful emotion” is one that will facilitate problem-resolution at that time.

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Questions

Tom Caplan, MSW

(514) 737-7208

[email protected]

www.needs-abc.com

www.tomcaplanmsw.com

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Trainings Available

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Trainings Available

Questions