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Motivational Interviewing. What it is and why you should be using it.
1. What it is and why you should be
using it
D e b b i e N i e r i , M S
C e n t e r f o r H e a l t h S e r v i c e s a n d P o l i c y R e s e a r c h
U n i v e r s i t y o f S o u t h C a r o l i n a
Motivational Interviewing (MI)
2. Reference
Miller, WR and Rollnick, S (2012). Motivational
Interviewing: Helping People Change (3rd Ed.). New
York: Guilford Press.
3. GOAL:
You will obtain a conceptual
understanding of the Processes and Core
Skills of Motivational Interviewing,
beginning with an appreciation of the
research which has enabled it to be
considered an evidence-based practice.
Part I
4. Evolution of MI and contributors
William R. Miller and Stephen Rollnick
Carl Rogers
Non-directive client-centered psychotherapy principles
Rogers protégé’s: Truaxx and Carkhuff: measuring degree of
proficiency in demonstrating Rogerian client-centered responses
5. Miller & Rollnick’s Summary of the Outcome Research
Currently more than 1200 publications
200 of which are Random Control Trials
Primary focus has been on addictive behaviors
Research base is broadening into the areas of
healthcare, corrections, and working with youth
6. Hypotheses and conclusions proposed by M&R
Notable and replicated findings
Small to medium effect sizes across a variety of
behavioral outcomes.
There are substantial effects on client outcomes based
on relationship with and characteristics of the
therapist.
Empathy, a key construct of MI, has been found to
promote positive client outcomes
7. Hypotheses and conclusions proposed by M&R
Within well controlled studies using treatment
manuals, substantial therapist effects remain.
Also, variability by site occurs, more as the norm than exception:
Client response is significantly effected by counselor
traits and contextual aspects of delivery, factors that
aren’t easily standardized by following a treatment
manual.
8. Hypotheses and conclusions proposed by M&R
• MI is intended to influence client factors that are
associated with positive outcomes
• The instillation of hope, supporting self-efficacy, and active
engagement
• MI may benefit from the contrast effect:
• Clients may have experienced more directive and confrontational
approaches and thus find MI relieving
• Cultural differences may exist:
• There were more substantial effect sizes with minority clients as
compared to the majority white population
9. Hypotheses and conclusions proposed by M&R
• Training in MI may help suppress counter-therapeutic
responses
• Findings suggest it takes few directive and confrontational
responses by the counselor to lead to resistance and self-
defensiveness in the client.
• Effectiveness of MI is linked to aspects of language:
• Specific forms of language presage greater behavior change and
can be demonstrated as directly related to counselor responses:
Change talk is the precursor to change.
Sustain talk is the hallmark of ambivalence- maintaining the status
quo.
10. Hypotheses and conclusions proposed by M&R
Training in MI may help suppress counter-therapeutic
responses
• A counselor who is focused on responding to clients using CORE
skills is less likely to insert their own opinions and views
• Client characteristics may moderate the measured
degree of effectiveness of MI
• Clients in action typically have already resolved ambivalence
11.
12. Definition of Motivational Interviewing
What we know about change
Communication Traps and how they influence
conversations about change
What is Motivational Interviewing?
13. Miller and Rollnick’s Definition of MI
MIis a collaborative, goal-oriented
style of communication with particular
attention to the language of change. It is
designed to strengthen personal motivation
for and commitment to a specific goal by
eliciting and exploring the person’s
own reasons for change within an
atmosphere of acceptance and
compassion
14. Wait!
Before we talk about MI, it is helpful to first
talk about what is known about how people
change.
15. The Transtheoretical Model of Change
Prochaska and DiClemente’s
Transtheoretical Model of Change
Stages of Change:
Pre-contemplation
Contemplation
Preparation
Action
Maintenance
Relapse to prior stages is entirely possible, if not probable, even
following extensive periods of abstinence
18. Pre-Contemplation Stage of Change
The person is unaware there is a problem or
under-aware of consequences of the problem.
“I am here because THEY made me come, it’s their
problem, not mine”
19. Contemplation Stage of Change
Beginning awareness and early understanding there
may be a problem yet is uncertain of what to do or not
fully understanding the nature of the dilemma.
“I know I lost control again and did things I regret, but I only go
overboard with the drinking because she makes me angry”
23. Ambivalence
Common to hear two kinds of talk mixed together:
Change talk: the person’s own statements that favor change, self-
motivational statements.
&
Sustain talk: the opposite of change talk, the persons own
arguments for not changing, for maintaining the status quo.
Sometimes in the same sentence…
24. “I want to quit smoking but
every time I’ve tried I gain weight then
start again.”
“I know it’s bad for my health
yet I can’t imagine not smoking.”
25. The path out of ambivalence is
to choose a direction, follow it,
and keep moving in the chosen
direction.
26. Mind Committees: Our personal internal debate teams
We trust ourselves and our own
opinions more so than others
When the internal debate team is in conflict there is no
change.
When the internal debate team settles on a direction
change occurs.
27. “The Righting Reflex” Miller & Rollnick (2012, pg. 6)
“A natural and instinctive response of trained
care providers is to fix the problem, make things
right, to use knowledge acquired from training
and experience to help the individual seeking care
to overcome their problems.”
28. Professional operating from
the Righting Reflex says to the:
Client feeling ambivalent,
who says/thinks in response:
“You need to stop ______”
“You haven’t been
compliant with the
treatment plan”
“You have to take this to
get better”
“Tell me something I
don’t already know”
“I’ve tried numerous
times and can’t seem to
stick with it”
“You sound like my
wife/husband”
What happens when these two meet?
29. Who do we listen to most?
Which side of the ambivalence debate is the
professional likely to side with?
Which side of the ambivalence debate is left for the
client to side with (internally or verbally)?
Sustain Talk opportunity wins!
= No Change
Change Talk opportunity lost!
30. Preparation Stage of Change
The person has an appreciable understanding of the
nature of the problem; can express desires, reasons,
abilities, and needs; discusses making or considering
plans to change however; sustain talk remains.
“I know I need to manage what I eat and exercise to help control
my diabetes yet every other time I’ve tried I’ve gone right back to
the same ole-same ole. I just don’t know if I have what it takes to
go the long haul.”
31. Action
The client is actively taking steps to change but has not
yet reached a stable state
“I’ve been testing my glucose levels and am keeping
track of what I’ve been eating”
“Yea, I quit smoking!”
“I started exercise boot camp last week!”
32. Maintenance
The client has achieved initial goals (such as
abstinence) and is now working to maintain gains.
“I have so much more energy now I’m thinking of
joining the YMCA and taking exercise classes”
33. So, why discuss Stages of Change?
Understanding the process of change and being able to
identify where your client is in the change process
facilitates choice in use of MI techniques and practices.
34. The Practitioner and Practice
Characteristics that provide the
foundation for Motivational
Interviewing:
“Habits of the Heart”
The Spirit of Motivational
Interviewing
36. Partnership
Dancing as opposed to wrestling
The willingness to suspend the reflex to dispense
expert advise is a key element in establishing
collaboration necessary to build partnership
37. Acceptance (Miller &Rollnick, 2012, p. 19)
A professional exhibiting Acceptance as intended in the
MI spirit:
“Honors each person’s absolute worth and potential
as a human being;
Recognizes and supports the person’s irrevocable
autonomy to choose his or her own way;
Seeks through accurate empathy to understand the
other’s perspective; and,
Affirms the person’s strengths and efforts
39. Evocation
A strengths-focused premise rather than a deficit-
focused model
People already have within themselves much of what is
needed and your task is to evoke it
A client’s own arguments for change are more
persuasive than whatever arguments you might be
able to provide
40. MI Processes and Core Skills
The Method of Motivational
Interviewing
41. Four Overlapping Processes
Engaging
Focusing
Evoking
Planning
The confluence of these four processes describe MI
42. Engaging: The relational foundation
Engaging is establishing a helpful connection and a
working relationship
Engagement is a prerequisite for everything
that follows
Engagement is an open-ended period that moves
toward a clear focus
43. Engagement
Is paramount
The quality of the therapeutic alliance between client and
counselor directly predicts both retention and outcome
The client’s perspective more strongly predicts outcome than
does the therapists’ perspective
Therapist style directly impacts development of engagement
44. Traps that Promote Disengagement
The Assessment Trap
The Expert Trap
The Premature Focus Trap
The Labeling Trap
The Blaming Trap
The Chat Trap
45. Factors Influencing Engagement
Desires or goals
Importance
Positivity
Expectations
Hope
Each of these factors should be attended to in the first
visit when engagement is the goal
46. Engaging: Reflective Listening
Takes a fair amount of practice to become skillful, in
spite of seeming easy to do
The crucial element of good listening is what the
counselor says in response to what the speaker offers.
The choice in what content the counselor reflects and
how is where MI becomes directional.
Avoid Communication Roadblocks
47. Focusing (Miller & Rollnick, 2012, p. 27)
“The process by which you develop and maintain a
specific direction in the conversation about change”
Both client and counselor have agendas which may or
may not align
48. Focusing
Answers the question:
What changes are hoped to arise from this consultation?
How often are the answers consistent between your
staff and the people they serve?
49. Styles of Communication
Directing: the focus is provider determined
As a default approach for promoting personal change this approach has
serious limitations
Following: entirely from what the client brings to each
consultation.
This may be the communication style used in initial encounters, particularly
when building engagement
Guiding: promotes a collaborative search for direction,
the focus is negotiated between experts (the client and
counselor)
Focusing calls for this is the style of communication (wherein MI falls)
50. Evoking: preparing people to change
The heart of MI: It is in the process of evoking that
counseling becomes distinctly MI
Evoking involves eliciting the client’s own motivations
for change
The expert/ directing approach does not facilitate
personal change
Personal change requires the individual’s active
participation and is a long term process
51. Component skills in Evoking
Recognizing change talk when you hear it
And, knowing how to evoke and respond to it when it occurs
Recognizing sustain talk when you hear it
And, understanding what it signifies and how to respond to it
Sustain Talk is the hallmark of ambivalence
52. If someone else voices an argument for
change, people are likely to respond by
expressing a counter-change argument from
the other side of their ambivalence.
People literally talk themselves out of
changing.
Similarly, people talk themselves into
changing by continuing to voice pro-change
arguments.
53. Preparatory Change Talk (The DARN’s)
Desire, Ability, Reasons, and Need
Each reflect the pro-change side of ambivalence.
They are considered preparatory change talk because
none of them, alone or together, indicate that change is
going to happen.
54. Mobilizing Change Talk (The CATS)
The CATS signal movement toward resolution of the
ambivalence in the favor of change.
Commitment: signals the likelihood of action
“I will”; “I promise”; “I guarantee”; “I intend to” (decision with a
little doubt)
Activation: movement toward but not quite a
commitment
“I’m willing to try”; “I am ready to”; “I am prepared to”
55. Mobilizing Change Talk
Taking Steps: the client has already done something in
the direction of change:
“I bought nicotine patches”; “I didn’t snack any evening this past
week”; “I quit smoking inside my house & car”
The DARN CATS: Language that signals
movement toward change
56. Sustain Talk
“Any speech that can be uttered on behalf of change
can also be spoken as an equal and opposite reaction
on behalf of the status quo” (p. 164)
In MI, sustain talk is not ignored, in the spirit of
acceptance, it is reflected, respected and included in
the larger picture
57. Evoking Motivation
Counselors can substantially influence the amount of
change talk spoken.
Strength and frequency of change talk increase over the
course of a MI session.
Amount of change talk predicts behavior
change
So, how do you increase the amount of change talk spoken by
clients?
58. Ask evoking questions
Ask open-ended questions surrounding the DARN’s:
(CAT’s are likely too premature)
DESIRE: “How would you like for things to change?”
ABILITY: “Of these various options you’ve considered,
what seems most possible?”
REASONS: “Why would you want to get more
exercise?”
NEED: “How serious is this to you?”
59. Ask evoking questions (cont)
Querying Extremes: “What concerns you the most
about…?”
Looking back: “Do you remember a time when things
were going well for you?”
Looking forward: “If you did decide to make this
change, what do you hope would be different in the
future?” OR: “Suppose you don’t make any change,
what do you think the future would hold?”
Explore broader goals and values
60. Wrong Questions?
Questions that would be ill-advised from an MI
perspective.
“Why haven’t you changed?”
“What keeps you doing this?”
“Why do you smoke?”
“Why aren’t you trying harder?”
“Why can’t you?”
61. Responding to Change Talk
When you hear it, respond to it!
Open-ended questions: Ask for more detail or examples
Affirmation: Comment positively about what you heard
Reflections: simple or complex, continuing the paragraph
Summaries: include change talk content in summaries
62. Responding to Sustain Talk
It is not desirable in MI to evoke and explore all of the
client’s possible reasons for maintaining the status quo
The intent of reflecting sustain talk is to acknowledge
what the person is saying without pushing against it as
this is likely to entrench sustain talk.
63. Reflective responses to Sustain Talk
Straight Reflection
Amplified Reflection
Double-sided Reflection
Emphasizing Autonomy
Reframing
Agreement with a twist
Running head start
Coming alongside
64. Planning
Encompasses both developing commitment to change
and formulating a specific plan of action
Is a conversation about action that:
is conducted with a sharp ear for eliciting clients’ own solutions;
promotes their autonomy of decision making; and,
continues to elicit and strengthen change talk as a plan emerges
65. Planning
There is a negotiation of change goals and plans, an
exchange of information, and usually a specification of
next steps that may or may not involve further
treatment
It is common for progress and motivation to fluctuate,
inviting renewal of planning, evoking, refocusing, or
even re-engagement
66. Signs Clients are ready to transition to planning
There is an increase in change talk with noticeable
strength in commitment language (The CATS)
The client has begun taking steps toward change-
testing the water
There is a noticeable reduction in the amount of
Sustain Talk
The Client demonstrates resolve
The client asks questions about change
67. Transitioning Methods
Recapitulation: A transitional collecting summary of
Change Talk, like adding flowers to a bouquet
“I’ve heard you say you want to feel better, live a longer life, be able to
do more things with your grandkids and set a better example for them
by not smoking. What do you think you need to do to get there?”
Key question: from the bouquet, ask a short and simple
question about doing
“What do you think will make that happen?”
Pregnant Pause: waiting for the client to hear themselves
or feel the affect associated with their statement, allows
them to sit with the discomfort without rescuing them.
68. Key Points to planning
Developing the plan is the beginning, not the final step.
Implementation intentions involve both a specific plan
and the intention or commitment to carry it out.
Public commitment, social support, and self-
monitoring can reinforce the best of intentions.
69. Supporting Change
Support persistence
Provide flexible revisiting
Re-planning
Reminding
Refocusing
Reengaging
71. Asking Open Questions
Gathering information is not the function of the question
in MI
Responses help you understand the person’s internal
frame of reference which strengthens the collaborative
nature of the relationship
Responses aid in finding a clear direction
72. Affirming
Happens through the MI spirit in a general sense and
specifically through direct recognition of particular
strengths, abilities, good intentions and efforts
Opposite stance to supporting and providing
affirmations is the idea that people will change if you can
just make them feel bad enough.
“You keep drinking when you know its ruining your relationship”
73. Reflective Listening
Making a guess about the client’s meaning
Functionally, it deepens the understanding of both the
counselor and client by clarifying
Allows people to hear again the thoughts and feelings
they are expressing and ponder them
Keeps the person talking, exploring, and considering
The listener chooses which aspects of the client’s
statements to reflect
74. Summarizing
Reflection statements that collect what the person has
been saying and offers it back, as if in a basket.
Summaries:
Pull together information at the end of a session
Suggest links between present material and past
Function to transition from one task to another
Provide a ‘what else?’ opportunity
Have different functions
75. Different functions of Summaries
Functions are based on which MI process is at task
Engaging: communicate what you’ve heard, provide lead for
further development of collaborative relationship
Focusing: the ‘what else?’ opportunity: ‘what have we missed’
Evoking: there are particular guidelines regarding eliciting
change talk and moving along
Planning: draw together the person’s motivation, intentions, and
specific plans for change
76. Informing and Advising
In MI, providing information and advising is
appropriate, with two considerations:
1. Information and advice are offered with permission
2. The goal for the counselor is to understand the client’s
perspective of the topic, their needs, and to facilitate the client
drawing their own conclusion about the relevance of any
information provided
77. Exchanging Information
Practitioners often overestimate the amount of
information clients need
It is unhelpful to give clients information they already
have (e.g., “smoking is bad for your health”)
It is more useful to learn what they know, what they’ve
already done or tried
78. Information Exchange: Principles of Good Practice
Clients are the experts on themselves
(using affirmations and reflections elicits a wealth of information)
Find out what they know and need to know
Match information to clients needs
Clients can tell you what kind of information would be
helpful
Advice that meets clients needs is helpful
80. Elicit Information Needs
Ask permission and clarify information gaps and needs:
“May I…?”
“Would you like to know about…?”
“What would you like to know about…?”
“Is there any information I can help you with?”
“What might be the biggest benefit to you if you were to quit
smoking?”
“What might you be most interested in knowing about
treatment options that help people quit smoking?”
81. Provide the needed information
Prioritize, be clear and concise, avoid jargon
Support autonomy
Offer small amounts with time to reflect
Acknowledge the freedom to disagree or ignore
Present what you know without interpreting the
meaning for the client
82. Elicit (again)
Check back in with the client to see what they
understand the information to mean, their
interpretation, or response
“So, what do you make of that?”
“Have I been clear so far?”
“You look puzzled?”
“How does this apply to you?”
“I wonder what all this means to you?”
“Tell me in your own words what I’ve said.”
83. Offering Advice
A special form of information giving as it implies a “do”
component: a recommendation about making personal
change
Follow steps to providing information: EPE
Advice carries a strong potential for reactance
Emphasize personal choice and
offer a menu of options
84. !! IMPORTANT TO REMEMBER !!
The vast majority of people
do not like receiving unsolicited advice.
Even more people don’t think twice about
giving it.
85. Idea/ concept Motivational Interviewing
1. Identical to Rogers’
non-directive counseling
2. A technique or gimmick
to make people change
1. MI’s focusing, evoking,
and planning have clear
directionality to them.
2. MI was specifically
developed to help clients
resolve ambivalence and
strengthen their own
commitment to change
MI: Is NOT/ Does NOT:
86. Idea/ concept Motivational Interviewing
3. MI is a panacea, the
solution to all clinical
problems
3. MI blends well with
other approaches and
does not negate the value
of other techniques. MI is
a style of being with
people, an integration of
clinical skills to foster
movement for change.
MI: Is NOT/ Does NOT:
87. Idea/ concept Motivational Interviewing
4. The Transtheoretical
Model (TTM), although
they are compatible and
complementary.
5. The “Decisional
Balance” technique
exploring the pros and
cons of change
4. TTM defines stages of
change while MI provides a
means of moving through the
stages
5. Decisional balance is more
associated with counseling
with neutrality as the
counselor explores con’s of
change. MI is more
directional, with the intent
being to strengthen the
arguments for change
MI: Is NOT/ Does NOT:
88. Idea/ concept Motivational Interviewing
6. Require the use of
assessment feedback
7. A way of manipulating
people into doing what
you want them to do
6. While personal feedback may
be particularly useful for persons
who aren’t considering change, it
is not a necessary nor a sufficient
component of MI.
7. MI cannot be used to
manufacture motivation that isn’t
already there. It is a collaborative
partnership that honors and
respects the other’s autonomy,
seeking to understand the
person’s internal frame of
reference.
MI: Is NOT/ Does NOT:
89. Goals:
1. You will understand what is known from the
research about learning and developing proficiency
in MI;
2. You will be exposed to some of the types of
services in which MI has been used (and
evaluated); and,
3. You will be able to identify characteristics of
practitioners/ practice settings which may influence
organizational adoption of MI.
Part II
90. 4 Broad Components of Skill in MI
2.
Engaging
3. Focusing
and
Evoking
4. Planning
and
Integration
1. MI
Knowledge
and Spirit
91. Training Guidelines
A single workshop is unlikely to improve competence
“In our first evaluation of our own 2-day training
workshop1, participants showed very little improvement in
skills, certainly not enough to make any difference in how
their clients responded, but we did manage to significantly
decrease their interest in learning more about MI” (p. 329)
1Miller, W.R., & Mount, K.A. (2001) A small study of training in motivational interviewing: Does one workshop
change clinician and client behavior? Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 29, 457-471.)
However, there are some who may attend one workshop and
“get it” (p. 329)
Typically such ‘protégé’s re reasonably skillful in reflective listening prior to
the training
92. MI Learning Menu
12 Learning Tasks identified by Miller and Rollnick
(2012)
Understanding the underlying MI Spirit (PACE
variables)
Developing skill and comfort with reflective listening
Identifying change goals (Focusing)
Exchanging information and providing advice within
an MI style (EPE)
Being able to recognize Change Talk and Sustain Talk
Evoking Change Talk
93. MI Learning Menu (cont)
Responding to Change Talk in a manner that
strengthens it
Responding to Sustain Talk and Discord in a way that
does not amplify it
Developing hope and confidence
Timing and negotiating a change plan
Strengthening commitment
Flexibly integrating MI with other clinical skills and
practices
94. How can the 12 learning tasks be accomplished?
More than obtaining knowledge is involved
Feedback is fundamental and the more immediate the
better
“it’s hard to learn archery in the dark” (p. 323)
Clients provide immediate feedback through their
responses to the counselor
95. Developing Proficiency: What’s needed?
Knowledge development and the opportunity for
continued learning over time through feedback and
coaching based on direct observation
Coaching need not be extensive
“One study found that 6 individual expert coaching sessions of ½ hour each
conducted by telephone were sufficient to bring trainees on average up to a
level of proficiency that would be satisfactory for delivering MI in clinical
trial” (p. 330)
It is a matter of learning to criterion, not a fixed dose of
training hours completed
Martino, S., Canning-Ball, M., Carroll, K.M., & Rounsaville, B.J. (2011). A criterion-based stepwise
approach for training counselors in motivational interviewing. Journal of Substance Abuse
Treatment, 40, 357-365.
96. MI Coaching and Feedback
While still valuable, a coaches feedback may be
subjective
Coding systems are available and provide objective
feedback
97. Types of Coding Systems
Coding interviewer responses
MITI: Motivational Interviewing Treatment Integrity
Moyers, T.B., Martin, T., Manuel, J.K., Hendrickson, S.M., and Miller, W.R. (2005)
Assessing competence in the use of motivational interviewing. Journal of
Substance Abuse Treatment, 28(1), 19-26.
Coding client responses
Glynn, L.H., & Moyers, T.B. (2010). Chasing change talk; The clinician’s role
in evoking client language about change. Journal of Substance Abuse
Treatment, 39, 65-70.
Quantify interviewer and client responses:
MISC: Motivational Interviewing Skills Code
Moyers, T.B., Martin, T., Catley, D., Harris, K., & Ahluwalia, J.S. (2003). Assessing
the integrity of motivational interventions: Reliability of the Motivational
Interviewing Skills Code. Behavioral and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 31, 177-184.
Visit: mi-campus.com
98. Additional Learning Methods
Learning Communities:
Groups of interested MI professionals working together to
monitor and build personal skills.
Self-assessment:
Not an ideal practice.
This option requires the individual to take an unbiased look at their
own performance. If doing so, record and listen to your sessions.
99. Listening to your own sessions
Record (with permission) your session and:
Count your reflections: were they simple or complex?
Offer more complex than simple reflections
Count your questions: were they open or closed?
Ask more open than closed questions
Count both reflections and questions: what is your ratio?
Aim for 2 reflections for every question
Listen for Change Talk and Sustain Talk: count each and determine the
ratio.
Equal frequency = ambivalence (no change)
When Change Talk occurred, what was the next thing you said?
Count your OARS responses
Listen for MI inconsistent responses (giving advice without permission,
confronting or arguing with the client, other “righting reflex” responses
How did the client respond to these?
100. Final Comments on Learning MI
Workshop training is a good start but it is just the
beginning.
Feedback and coaching are important in learning MI
and need to be based on observed practice and
continue over time, even for the experts.
Skills tend to drift over time
Skill development in MI is not a one-shot event but an
ongoing process.
101. Modes of Delivery and Service
Settings
Problem areas that have been
researched
Applying Motivational
Interviewing
102. Modes of Delivery
Consultations with individuals
Telephone and Televideo
Dozens of studies have been done using these methods for/to:
promote physical exercise, colorectal cancer screening,
medication persistence, dietary change; tobacco cessation; and,
blood donation (See Miller and Rollnick, 2012, p. 337 for
comprehensive list of citations)
Group Counseling
Strongly recommended practitioners hone their skills in
individual first
103. Modes of Delivery
Text formats:
Early stage of research; shows promising results
Examples include:
Computer based delivery of the drinker’s check-up (Walters, Hester,
Chiauzzi, & Miller (2005)
Smoking cessation: (Hollis, et al., 2005)
Depression and marijuana use: (Kay-Lambkin, Baker, Lewin, & Carr,
2009)
Drug use during pregnancy: (Ondersma, Chase, Svikis, & Schuster,
2005)
Each of the formats involved providing personalized feedback
regarding substance use, which in itself may enhance motivation
to change (Juarez et al., 2005)
104. Modes of Delivery
Family consultations:
Doing so may increase social support for change.
The significant other (SO) may need coaching prior to involvement to
reduce potential for their interactions to reinforce sustain talk (ie.,
they may blame, etc)
Using MI with personalized feedback (Motivational Enhancement
Therapy) has been used within family treatment contexts
(Connell & Dishion, 2008; Slavet, et al., 2005; Van Ryzin, Stormshak,
& Dishion, 2012)
107. Considerations for scope of implementation
Limited implementation with few staff vs. training for
all staff
The role of workshops
“Workshop training is a good start, but only a beginning” (p. 354)
Ongoing Coaching and Peer Support
Improving service-wide conversations about change
“Life inside a clinical consultation is often an expression of forces
outside of it” ( p. 358)
108. Organizations: Common areas for improvement
Communication style
Avoid overuse of directing style
Have two feet planted firmly in the Guiding Style
Engagement
Client engagement is a thermometer of a well-functioning therapeutic
relationship or service
Information Exchange
Information exchange can be viewed as a process rather than an
event, one that requires thoughtfulness on both sides
Miller: Using fidelity checks (direct observation and coding), 9 therapists delivered manual guided treatment and experienced different client outcomes: the therapist the client had been assigned to contributed significantly to client outcomes: those that had established greater accurate empathy, had more positive client outcomes.During fellowship, trained graduate students on Rogerian client-centered counseling techniques. “There is a lovely resonance in the fact that Motivational Interviewing was literally evoked from me” (pg. 373).Australia: Met Steve Rollnick who was interested in learning ways to teach MI. Decided to write about MI together resulting in the first edition of MI in 1991. The book focused on alcohol addiction.The principles of client-centered treatment heavily influence both the importance and process of engaging clients and establishing empathy and the use of reflective listening, promoting unconditional positive regard, affirming, etc.