Enhancing Clinician Mentalizing for Stressed Families
Publication Title: The Family Cycle in Supervision: Enhancing Clinician Mentalizing in Work with Highly Stressed Families
Summary
- Question
This article describes how a clinical activity called the Family Cycle can enhance clinicians' ability to mentalize—understand and reflect on—the thoughts and feelings of highly stressed families in therapy. The authors focused on applying this technique in supervision to help clinicians navigate the complexities of working with families facing multigenerational trauma, adversity, and stress.
- Why it Matters
Mentalizing is critical in therapeutic work, as it allows clinicians to empathize and connect with clients, particularly those in crisis. Families with histories of trauma often struggle to trust providers, making engagement challenging. This article is significant because it demonstrates how supervision can foster clinicians' mentalizing skills, improving their ability to support families and avoid psychiatric hospitalizations for children. By focusing on clinicians’ reflective capacities, the study contributes to better therapeutic outcomes and addresses systemic challenges such as poverty, housing insecurity, and emotional dysregulation.
- Methods
The article centered on the Intensive In-Home Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Services (IICAPS) program, which provides home-based therapy to children at risk of psychiatric hospitalization. Clinicians worked in pairs over six months, with weekly supervision sessions using the Family Cycle. This activity involves visualizing the relational dynamics within families through six interconnected themes, such as unacknowledged loss and external dynamics. Supervisors guide clinicians in exploring these themes to deepen their understanding of family experiences.
- Key Findings
Using the Family Cycle in supervision helps clinicians better understand the emotional and relational dynamics of the families they work with. Clinicians were able to identify patterns, such as how trauma impacts parenting and child behavior, and address barriers to therapeutic engagement. The process also improved clinicians’ emotional regulation and reflective skills, enabling them to connect more effectively with families and tailor interventions to their unique needs.
- Implications
This article highlights the importance of supervision in developing clinicians' mentalizing capacities, which are essential for working with highly stressed families. By fostering safety, regulation, and trust in the supervisory relationship, clinicians can better support families in crisis. The findings have practical implications for mental health training programs and therapeutic models, emphasizing the need for structured reflective practices to improve outcomes in complex cases.
- Next Steps
- The authors suggested further research into how the Family Cycle can be adapted for different clinical settings and populations. They also recommended exploring how supervision practices that prioritize mentalizing could be integrated into broader mental health training programs to enhance clinician effectiveness across various therapeutic contexts.
- Funding Information
This article was supported by the Yale Child Study Center.
Full Citation
Authors
Victoria Stob, LCSW, MSW
First AuthorAssistant Clinical Professor of Social Work in the Child Study Center
Joseph Woolston, MD
Last AuthorAlbert J.Solnit Professor Emeritus in the Child Study Center