ROLE OF SIGNIFICANT OTHERS
ROLE OF SIGNIFICANT OTHERS IN TREATMENT
Brief-TSF includes a ‘Partner Brief-TSF’ program to be used as adjunctive therapy whenever possible when an alcoholic patient is in a relationship.
Partner Brief-TSF can also be applied when the alcoholic is not in treatment.
Like other aspects of Brief-TSF, the partner sessions are focused and aim to meet specific goals.
Partner Brief-TSF is not intended to be used as brief marital or relationship counseling, although one objective of these sessions is to help the patient(s) assess the impact of alcohol abuse on the relationship. Marital therapy may be briefly discussed, and significant others concerns, frustrations, and grievances are validated, but the facilitator also suggests that intensive relationship counseling (along with other therapies such as family therapy or sex therapy) be deferred, at least until the client has completed Brief-TSF and, preferably, 6 months of sobriety.
The Partner Brief-TSF sessions deal with the subjects of enabling and detaching. Both of these concepts have their origins in Al-Anon, a 12-step program similar to AA but for the affected rather than the addicted. A primary goal of the Partner Brief-TSF program is to encourage and briefly facilitate the partner’s use of Al-Anon as a resource for coping with being in a relationship with an alcoholic and also for healing personal wounds that typically derive from that kind of relationship.
Another goal is to assess initially the partner’s use of alcohol or other drugs and make an appropriate referral if necessary. Finally, the goals and objectives of Brief-TSF itself and AA are outlined.
Brief-TSF includes guidelines for handling emergency calls from a partner. The approach emphasizes support and efforts to facilitate the partner’s use of Al-Anon.
Get regular updates by RSS feed
If you support TSF please make a donation
