Family psychology and systemic approaches: Working effectively in a variety of contexts

2012 
This series considers the importance of family psychology training and ethical concerns that scarcity of training in this area may leave psychologists poorly prepared with couples and families. In the lead article, Michele Harway and Steve Kadin set the stage for using systemic formulations to treat couples and families. They challenge practitioners to obtain additional exposure. Using clinical vignettes, they suggest combining systemic approaches with traditional approaches. The efficacy of systemic interventions is considered, as are ethical issues of working with couples and families. The three commentaries support that psychology must make a paradigm shift to accommodate the changing needs of service recipients. Michael Gottlieb argues that the time is now for systems interventions. Integrated models of patient-centered health care require psychologists with systems training as pivotal members of the team. Medicine’s acknowledgment that physical ailments occur in relationships requires family psychologists to be part of that team. Roberta Nutt suggests that as our population changes and becomes more diverse, family psychology has much to contribute to cultural competence training. Since many cultural groups are collectivistic, systemic approaches must be taught side-by-side with individualistic approaches. Systemic perspectives can also address the intersectionality of identities, which can help navigate multiple systems. Marianne Celano proposes family psychology training for psychologists treating
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