Title Therapeutic Process Through an Analysis of Significant Events in Psychodramatic Family Therapy
Authors Garcia-Medina, Carlos , MAYA SEGURA, JESÚS MANUEL, Jimenez, Lucia
External publication No
Means Fam Process
Scope Article
Nature Científica
JCR Quartile 1
SJR Quartile 1
Web https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-105000821930&doi=10.1111%2ffamp.70023&partnerID=40&md5=2adf3f0e30cbac36cd7c82c9b77ef8f6
Publication date 01/03/2025
ISI 001447003000001
Scopus Id 2-s2.0-105000821930
DOI 10.1111/famp.70023
Abstract Significant events are defined as relevant moments in therapy that help in understanding how changes occur. Scene-based psychodramatic family therapy follows a multiple-family-group format based on systemic therapy and psychodrama, aimed at families with adolescents exhibiting externalizing problems. This study aimed to identify the significant events and analyze therapeutic processes through a joint analysis of significant events from the client\'s perspective. Fourteen multiple-family groups were evaluated (122 adolescents and 107 parents in total) through focus groups at the end of the treatment. Using thematic analysis, we identified six types of significant events, the phase of treatment in which they occurred, the clients\' involvement during the identified events, the modality of the intervention in which the events occurred, and their impact. The results confirm enactment, conflict dramatization, emotional expression, and catharsis as the main events in multiple-family groups. The participants reported significant events, particularly during the middle and final phases of the treatment, notably moments related to enactment and role-playing situations. Moreover, adolescents identified significant events both in group moments without their parents and in group situations with their parents. These findings highlight key mechanisms of change in families with adolescents exhibiting externalizing behaviors that participate in multiple-family groups with a systemic approach and psychodramatic techniques.
Keywords adolescents; family therapy; mechanisms of change; multiple-family groups; psychodrama; significant events
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