Recovery Model and Effective MFT
Describe in a 3- to 4-page paper ways that postmodernism and social constructionism are related to the recovery model.
Include specific ways you can use the recovery model and its relationships to be a more effective marriage and family therapist.
Apa format
Required Readings
- SAMHSA. (2011). Recovery and Recovery Support (Links to an external site.).
- Jones, L., Hardiman, E., & Carpenter, J. (2007). Mental health recovery: A strengths-based approach to culturally relevant services for African Americans. Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, 15(2–3), 251–269.
- Lunt, A. (2004). The implications for the clinician of adopting a recovery model: The role of choice in assertive treatment. Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal, 28(1), 93–97.
- Onken, S. J., Craig, C. M., Ridgway, P., Ralph, R. O., & Cook, J. A. (2007). An analysis of the definitions and elements of recovery: a review of the literature. Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal, 31(1), 9–22.
- Reisner, A. D. (2005). The common factors, Empirically validated treatments, and recovery models of therapeutic change. Psychological Record, 55(3), 377–399.
- Gehart, D. R. (2012). The mental health recovery movement and family therapy, part I: Consumer‐led reform of services to persons diagnosed with severe mental illness. Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 38(3), 429–442.
- Gehart, D. R. (2012). The mental health recovery movement and family therapy, part II: A collaborative, appreciative approach for supporting mental health recovery. Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 38(3), 443–457.
- Dawson, L., Rhodes, P., & Touyz, S. (2014). The recovery model and anorexia nervosa. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 1–8.
- Giesbrecht, N., & Sevcik, I. (2000). The process of recovery and rebuilding among abused women in the conservative evangelical subculture. Journal of Family Violence, 15(3), 229–248.