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    Enhancing Parental Mentalization in Child Mental Health Care

    Publication Title: The Family Cycle: An Activity to Enhance Parents’ Mentalization in Children’s Mental Health Treatment

    Summary

    • Journal of Infant Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy

      18 (2) - April 2019

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    Question

    This article introduces the Family Cycle, a therapeutic activity designed to improve parents’ mentalization abilities in the context of treating children with mental health challenges. Mentalization refers to the ability to understand and interpret one's own and others' thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. The authors aimed to explore how the Family Cycle can help families navigate complex, multigenerational trauma and emotional difficulties, particularly through fostering reflective functioning and creating narratives around adverse childhood experiences.

    Why it Matters
    Mental health challenges in children are often deeply intertwined with family dynamics, including the impact of parents’ own unresolved childhood trauma. These cycles of trauma can perpetuate emotional and behavioral difficulties across generations, contributing to a lack of trust, communication issues, and emotional dysregulation. By enhancing parents’ ability to mentalize, the Family Cycle activity seeks to address these challenges by fostering understanding and empathy between parents and children. This approach has the potential to improve family relationships, support children’s emotional regulation, and reduce the risk of crises such as hospitalization or out-of-home placement.
    Methods

    The Family Cycle was developed as part of the Intensive In-Home Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Service (IICAPS) at Yale Child Study Center. IICAPS is a six-month, home-based intervention targeting children aged 3 to 18 with severe emotional disturbances and their families. Using visual and narrative techniques, the Family Cycle helps families identify connections between past trauma, current emotions, behaviors, and family dynamics. Clinicians work with both parents and children individually before bringing them together to collaboratively complete the activity.

    Key Findings
    The Family Cycle revealed how unresolved parental trauma can influence parenting behaviors and, in turn, impact children’s emotional and behavioral development. It helped parents recognize how their own reactions—such as withdrawal or overidentification—may reinforce their child’s feelings of insecurity or self-blame. For children, the activity provided a structured way to express painful experiences and connect them to their emotions and behaviors. Families reported greater understanding of each other’s experiences, improved communication, and reduced emotional distress.
    Implications

    The Family Cycle has potential for improving family-based mental health interventions. By fostering parents’ ability to mentalize and creating shared narratives, the activity can help families address cycles of trauma and emotional dysregulation. This approach could enhance the effectiveness of treatments for children with severe emotional disturbances and may reduce the need for crisis interventions, such as hospitalization. It also highlights the importance of addressing parental mental health in child-focused therapy.

    Next Steps
    The authors suggest further research to evaluate the effectiveness of the Family Cycle in different settings, such as outpatient clinics. They also recommend training clinicians in the activity’s implementation to ensure consistency and effectiveness. Expanding the use of the Family Cycle to other high-risk populations could further explore its applicability and impact.
    Funding Information

    This article was supported by Yale University through the Yale Child Study Center.

    Full Citation

    Stob V, Slade A, Brotnow L, Adnopoz J, Woolston J. The Family Cycle: An Activity to Enhance Parents’ Mentalization in Children’s Mental Health Treatment. Journal Of Infant Child And Adolescent Psychotherapy 2019, 18: 103-119. DOI: 10.1080/15289168.2019.1591887.
    This AI-assisted summary has been reviewed and approved by at least one of the study's authors to ensure it accurately reflects the research.

    Authors

    • Victoria Stob, LCSW, MSW

      First Author
      Yale School of Medicine

      Assistant Clinical Professor of Social Work in the Child Study Center

    • Joseph Woolston, MD

      Last Author
      Yale School of Medicine

      Albert J.Solnit Professor Emeritus in the Child Study Center

    Research Themes

    Concepts

    • Journal of Infant Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy

      18 (2) - April 2019

      Read Full Publication
    • Engagement

      Citation