NOTEWORTHY

Ethical Practice & Global Perspectives

 

data note


global perspectives

A Multifamily Therapy Model in Havana, Cuba

Interfamily therapy (IFT) is a specific model for multifamily therapy of recent expansion in Latin American and European countries. The term multifamily therapy refers to a range of therapeutic interventions carried out in multifamily groups, which are therapeutic environments in which both patients and their family members participate together. In IFT, a multifamily group becomes a community of learning where professionals and family members establish collaborative relationships and participate in dialogues.

The World Health Organization has indicated that mental health problems account for 16% of the global burden of disease and injury in the infant-juvenile population. Failure to address these problems has consequences that extend into adulthood, affecting both physical and mental health, and limiting opportunities for a satisfying adulthood. Considerable progress has been made in recent decades in developing effective therapies for children and adolescents with mental health conditions involving the family.

This study used a qualitative phenomenological approach to explore the participants’ perspective of 14 members and ex-members of two IFT groups conducted in Infant-Juvenile Mental Health Centers in Havana, Cuba. IFT was well accepted and effective, and it was perceived as beneficial due to its positive influence for participants, with benefits on a personal, family and social level. In addition, participants articulated a series of therapeutic elements of IFT that were essential to promote these benefits. IFT seems to be a useful therapeutic model in the treatment of children, adolescents and their families in a Cuban psychiatric setting.

Read the full study in the Journal of Marital and Family Therapy.

Ruiz-Íñiguez, R., Carralero-Montero, A., Martínez-González, A., Méndez-Parra, E., Valdés-Díaz, Y., & Sempere, J. (2021). Interfamily therapy, a multifamily therapy model settled in infant-juvenile mental health services of Havana (Cuba): A qualitative study from participants’ perspectives. Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 00, 1-21. https://doi.org/10.1111/jmft.12542

Other articles

Meaning of Aging in a Time of Crisis
Special to This Issue

The Results of the 2021 Student Ethics Competition Are In!

In 2021, AAMFT held the sixth annual Student Ethics Competition. This competition is designed to encourage MFT students to foster an interest in ethics issues and enhance their ability to analyze and respond to the various ethics issues that they will undoubtedly encounter throughout their careers. In this team competition, participants submitted an essay analyzing and responding to a hypothetical scenario.

 

Meaning of Aging in a Time of Crisis
Ethics, Spirituality, and the LGBTQ+ Community

Bridging the Divide: Creating Respectful Dialogue

We live in a divisive world. So much of what we see and hear as part of the socio-political narrative is filled with argument and contention that polarizes discussion, ideas, and sometimes even people.
Benjamin Erwin, PhD

Meaning of Aging in a Time of Crisis
Perspectives

Healing Systems: Therapy with Mandated Clients

Mandated clients are often navigating many systems at once. These systems include their families, their schools, the Department of Juvenile Justice (DJJ)/Juvenile Services Department (JSD), etc. In addition to navigating multiple systems, mandated clients may be experiencing levels of trauma (or Adverse Childhood Experiences – “ACEs”), individually or within the family system.
Edmound M. Davis, MS & Franchesca Meyers, MS