May / June 2024 Volume 23, No. 3

Why Therapists Need to Get Paid: An MFT Private Practitioner’s View

Overview I would like to offer a candid, behind-the-scenes look at the way therapists get paid. As a marriage and family therapist who transitioned from a solo private practice to a group practice, I will highlight the unique challenges we face in getting paid and provide insight into the myths and limitations of our earnings. [...]

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May / June 2024 Volume 23, No. 3

A Systems Perspective on the Firefighter Mental Health Crisis

Do first responders need therapy? I spoke with John Nicoletti about the phenomenon of well-meaning but under-informed therapists. Nicoletti is best known for his work conducting debriefings after mass casualty events. He responded to the Columbine shooting in 1999 and the Aurora theatre shooting in 2012. He still does debriefings for law enforcement after potentially [...]

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May / June 2024 Volume 23, No. 3

A Systems Approach to Understanding Mental Health in the Workplace

Understanding mental health in the workplace requires an exploration of the multilayered individual, familial, and environmental factors associated with well-being. Bronfenbrenner’s ecological theory on human development offers a holistic framework and identifies five levels of impact: microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, macrosystem, and chronosystem (Bone, 2015; Smith et al., 2022). The microsystem, the most influential level, refers [...]

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May / June 2024 Volume 23, No. 3

From Exhaustion to Empowerment: A Therapist’s Guide to Supporting Clients Through Burnout

Maria, 34, comes into your office and slumps into the couch opposite you. She looks drained, and you notice that her outfit seems a little less put-together than usual. Something is clearly going on. She immediately dives into how “over work” she is, citing a micromanaging boss, unrealistic expectations, and no time off to speak [...]

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March / April 2024 Volume 23, No. 2

How EMDR Therapy Helps Families and Individuals with Disabilities

Individuals with intellectual, developmental, and physical disabilities are more likely to experience traumatic experiences than individuals without a disability (i.e., Rumball, 2020; Hulbert-Williams et al., 2014; Soylu et al., 2013). For instance, approximately 45% of individuals with autism report symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD; Rumball, 2020). Adults with intellectual disability are more likely to [...]

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March / April 2024 Volume 23, No. 2

Systemic Family Therapy and Disabilities

Family Systems Illness Model and neurodevelopmental disabilities John Rolland’s Family Systems Illness (FSI) model provides a systemic framework for us to conceptualize both disabilities and family functioning as well as their intersection and reciprocal influences (Rolland, 2018). Foundational to the field of marriage and family therapy is systems theory, conceptualizing health issues within their relational [...]

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March / April 2024 Volume 23, No. 2

When “Miracles” Aren’t Possible: Careful Considerations When Working with a Client or Family with a Disability

I stopped seeing my therapist because she kept stating that my Autism was a ‘problem’ or asking me what life would be like without it. It started to make me feel bad about myself. Much like working with any diverse population, when working with clients with a physical, developmental, or intellectual disability, our language needs [...]

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January/February 2024 Volume 23, No. 1

Supporting Daughters of Latin American Immigrants Navigating Higher Education

A topic seldom discussed is the challenges that daughters of Latin American immigrants face and overcome when seeking higher education. Studies have shown there has been an increase in Latin women pursuing higher education than in previous years (Mora, 2022). Despite the growing numbers, attainment of degrees often stays the same due to the incompletion [...]

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January/February 2024 Volume 23, No. 1

Beyond Our Struggles: Addressing Stereotypes in Latinx Families

In 2020, the U.S. Latinx population reached 62.1 million, constituting 19% of the entire American population. This positions it as the second-largest racial or ethnic group in the nation, following White Americans, as reported by the U.S. Census Bureau (2021). Since 1970, when Latinx people made up 5% of the U.S. population and numbered 9.6 [...]

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January/February 2024 Volume 23, No. 1

From Adversity to Empowerment: Using Ancestral Stories to Guide Latinx Therapy

The Latinx community finds richness in the art of storytelling folk traditions that have shaped many Latin-American countries since the times of their independence from Spain in the 19th century (Miller, 2004). As bilingual marriage and family therapists (MFTs), supervisors, and instructors at a Hispanic-serving institution, we have witnessed the relevance and power of using [...]

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