Initiating the dialogue between infant mental health and family therapy: a qualitative inquiry and recommendations

Author:

Opie Jessica E.1ORCID,Booth Anna T.1ORCID,Rossen Larissa2ORCID,Fivaz‐Depeursinge Elisabeth3,Duschinsky Robbie4ORCID,Newman Louise5ORCID,McIntosh Jennifer E.1ORCID,Hartley Eliza1ORCID,Painter Felicity1ORCID,Oppenheim David6ORCID,Paul Campbell57ORCID,Corboz‐Warnery Antoinette3,Carr Alan8ORCID,Philipp Diane A.9ORCID,McHale James P.10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Bouverie Centre, School of Psychology & Public Health La Trobe University Melbourne Victoria Australia

2. Counselling Psychology Department Trinity Western University Langley Township British Columbia Canada

3. Department of Psychiatry Lausanne University Hospital and University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

4. Department of Public Health and Primary Care University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

5. Department of Psychiatry University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

6. School of Psychological Sciences and Center for the Study of Child Development University of Haifa Haifa Israel

7. Mental Health Service The Royal Children's Hospital Melbourne Victoria Australia

8. School of Psychology University College Dublin Dublin Ireland

9. Department of Psychiatry University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

10. Department of Psychology University of South Florida St. Petersburg Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractThis qualitative study explores infant‐family mental health experts' perspectives and experiences regarding the inclusion of infants in the family therapy setting. Infant socioemotional development is relational in nature and evolves in the context of both dyadic attachment relationships and broader multi‐person co‐parenting systems. Given this, we sought to understand why family therapy interventions involving families with infants rarely include the infant in a triangular or family systemic approach. Interviews were completed by clinical and/or research experts whose work integrates tenets of both infant mental health (IMH) and family theory and therapy. All interviewees brought at least 5 years of expertise and were actively engaged in the field. Interviewees expressed consistent beliefs that infants have a rightful and helpful place in family therapy approaches. They maintained that infants' innate social drive and communicative capacities position them to make meaningful and clinically significant contributions within family and systemic psychotherapy contexts. Noting that infants have remained on the periphery of these practices, experts advocated expansion and greater integration between IMH and family therapy, while preserving each field's distinctive identity. Experts reported that the interplay between IMH and family therapy fields has been uni‐directional as family systems concepts are embedded within IMH approaches, but few IMH premises are incorporated in mainstream family therapy practices. The disconnect was attributed to multiple factors, including graduate and professional training and theoretical, clinical, research, and sociocultural barriers, which were mutually reinforcing. Experts also identified clinical gains for both infants and family members when infants were meaningfully included in family interventions. Common ground was identified between the disciplines, with a belief that relationally distressed young children and parents are best served by clinical engagement with their network of relationships. Results call for greater collaboration between disciplines to challenge existing traditions and to more fully include infants in mainstream family therapy. Recommendations for integration of family therapy and IMH in clinical, theoretical, research, training, and sociocultural domains are offered.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychology (miscellaneous),Sociology and Political Science

Reference64 articles.

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Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Family therapy and infant mental health: exploring the potential space;Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy;2023-12

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