
Practice Guidelines for Group Psychotherapy
Therapist Interventions
There are many ways that the
therapist role has been defined in the literature over the years. One of the
most respected contributions was that of Lieberman, Yalom and Miles (1973) in
their publication of a comprehensive study of a wide variety of groups and
therapist functions. They identified the groups they studied as “encounter
groups,” but in fact they included some groups that traditionally fall under the
rubric of therapy groups (e.g. psychoanalytic, transactional analysis, gestalt),
along with some that do not (t-group, “Esalen”, personal growth). Despite the
fact that only some of the groups they studied were therapy groups per se, all
were aimed at being therapeutic for their participants. Utilizing factor
analysis as their basic statistical tool, they identified four basic functions
of the group leader: executive function, caring, emotional stimulation, and
meaning-attribution. Though this work was done more than 30 years ago, no
better schema has been developed for thinking about the different matters to
which a group therapist must attend. This section will review each of these
functions in turn.
Executive Function.
“Executive function” refers to setting up the parameters of the group,
establishing rules and limits, managing time, and interceding when the group
goes off course in some way. All of these functions can be understood as
various forms of “boundary management”. The establishment of boundaries occurs
when a group is formed, but the maintenance of those boundaries is a priority to
which a therapist must attend at all times. When a group is running well, there
may be little for a therapist to do in this area, but a competent group
therapist must be ever vigilant that boundaries are being maintained, and always
ready to invoke them when necessary. A partial listing of the boundaries to
which a therapist must attend includes membership (who is in and who is out),
time (when the group begins and ends, whether punctuality becomes a problem),
subject matter (is the group attending to what is important, and if not, what
can be done about it?), affective expression (are the forms of emotional
expression facilitative of therapeutic work?), and anxiety level (titrating it
so that it is neither too low nor too high). Effective executive functioning is
essential for good group psychotherapy; it sets the stage for effective
therapeutic work to occur.
Caring. “Caring”
refers to being concerned with the well-being of the members of the group, and
with the effectiveness of the treatment they are receiving. This is crucial
because the therapist sets the tone for how the members of the group treat and
regard each other. Without the overarching understanding that group members are
interested in being of help to each other, a group will founder and potentially
become destructive. This is not to say that members cannot be angry with each
other, or give each other critical feedback, but it is imperative that there
always be a substrate of trust that people are committed to trying to be of help
to each other. When a therapist senses that this is in question, it is crucial
to address it and find a way to reinstitute it in the minds and hearts of the
group members. It is imperative for clients to feel that the group and its
members are dedicated to trying to be helpful, even when critical feedback is
offered. Only in this way can members feel trusting of the group, a necessity
for a positive therapeutic alliance between each member and the group to
develop. Useful therapeutic work cannot occur without a solid positive
therapeutic alliance between each member and the group, including but not
limited to the group therapist.
Emotional Stimulation.
“Emotional stimulation” refers to the therapist’s efforts to uncover and
encourage the expression of feelings, values and personal attitudes. Of course
there are some groups that need very little, if anything, from the therapist on
this front, because the members bring all the energy and ability to work in this
fashion that is needed. Other groups require prodding, modeling, bridging (Ormont,
1990), and other forms of therapist-initiated interventions to move in this
direction. Therapy groups work optimally when the therapeutic dialogue is
emotionally charged, and yet at the same time controlled enough that group
members are able to pull back from the here-and-now exchanges to reflect upon
what can be learned about themselves and others in the group.
Meaning-Attribution.
“Meaning-attribution” refers to the cognitive aspect of group treatment, and
involves the therapist helping members to develop their ability to understand
themselves, each other, and people outside the group, as well as what they might
do to change things in their lives. It is important to note that the
development of understanding, or “insight,” is not an emotionally neutral
experience; when insight is most useful, it carries an emotional charge because
it centers upon matters that are of great emotional importance to the client.
Insight may be facilitated by the therapist’s interpretation, but this is not
the only way that insight is developed in a group setting. Members make
comments to each other that can facilitate insight. The therapist might play an
active role in promoting such an occurrence, or it might happen spontaneously
between two or more group members with the therapist having no active role in
the interaction.
All of the basic
therapist functions (executive function, caring, emotional stimulation, and
meaning-attribution) are of significant importance. The therapist may have to
attend to some of these functions a great deal in some groups and very little in
others. What is crucial is that the group have a healthy balance of leader
activity ensuring that it runs efficiently with appropriate boundaries being
maintained; that members feel they are in an environment in which they are
genuinely cared about by the therapist and the other group members; and that
there is an ability to move back and forth between emotionally charged exchanges
and reflection about, and learning from, what transpires in the group. In
addition to these four basic therapist functions, the contemporary group
therapist also productively addresses the following allied therapeutic
considerations.
Fostering Client
Self-Awareness. There is a good deal of misunderstanding about the meaning
of the term “insight” (Castonguay & Hill, 2006). In the psychoanalytic
literature, the word usually refers to what might be called “genetic” insight:
coming to understand how some aspect of one’s past is affecting one in the
present. This is indeed one form of insight, but it is not the only one. Group
therapy is particularly suited for helping participants develop other forms of
insight: how other people are affected by them and what is it about other
people that elicit particular kinds of responses in them. These forms of
insight are more dynamic and are considered elements of “interpersonal learning”
that are developed by the giving and receiving of interpersonal feedback (Yalom
& Leszcz, 2005).
Establishing Group Norms.
Group therapists do not “teach” in the direct sense of imparting didactic
information that group members are expected to take in. However, they do
establish and reinforce productive group norms that shape the therapy. At times
the group norms develop spontaneously. At other times they require direct
intervention. This may include directing the dialogue that occurs so that the
exchanges are therapeutic for group members. How do group leaders accomplish
this? By choosing what to respond to and what to ignore; by framing questions
they believe are most worth pursuing; and by encouraging members to interact
with each other in particular ways. Of course it is possible that the group
therapist’s efforts will be opposed or ignored, but usually groups come to
interact in accord with the “shaping” of dialogue that the therapist has engaged
in. Why is this so? Because the group therapist’s words carry disproportionate
weight with group members by virtue of the therapist’s authority, both in
objective terms and rooted in transference.
One of the primary modes of
exchange that group therapists are most interested in bringing about in their
groups is the giving and receiving of interpersonal feedback. This usually
begins when therapists ask questions like “How did people respond to the way
Patricia asked Don her question? “, or “Why isn’t anyone saying anything about
Linda’s lateness?” Over time, the group picks up on this kind of prompting, and
starts responding to each other without the therapist needing to prod.
Exchanging interpersonal
feedback is often facilitated by the therapist modeling the optimal response to
feedback that may be directed to her. The goal is for members to neither accept
nor reject feedback reflexively, but rather to consider such feedback as
honestly as they can. Thus, when feedback is offered to the therapist, or when
the therapist asks for it, the therapist strives to be as open and non-defensive
as possible. When there is something to be acknowledged, it should be; when the
therapist cannot see the validity of what is being suggested, this needs to be
said as well, but conveyed with the sense that what has been said has been
honestly considered rather than rejected in a defensive way. Often a member’s
feedback represents a perspective that is different from the therapist’s. When
the therapist sees it in this way, it should be acknowledged as such and
distinguished from rejecting the feedback as “wrong”.
Another crucial component of
effective group treatment is the use of the here-and-now to illuminate
individual, sub-group, and group-as-a-whole themes. Consistent with earlier
principles, this is accomplished by the therapist shaping interventions that
steer the group, over time, to pay attention to here-and-now phenomena. When
therapists ask, at any point in time, how members are responding to what is
occurring at that moment, they are shaping the group in the direction of
attending to here-and-now phenomena. Talking about how members are relating to
each other and to the therapist increases the anxiety level that everyone feels
in a useful way, because it makes the opportunity for learning much more
powerful. This is not to say that the discussion of historical experiences is
without value. In a well-functioning group, there is a healthy balance between
the exploration of members’ current lives outside the group, historical
material, and here-and-now phenomena. It is important to note that the
exploration of here-and-now phenomena is not confined to the verbal level.
People communicate a great deal about themselves non-verbally, and these
communications become evident in the group therapy setting. By commenting on
such communications when they occur, the therapist is once again shaping the
group in a therapeutic direction.
Therapist Transparency and
Use of Self. It is widely recognized that group therapy is a more public
form of therapy and that the therapist as a participant and observer is more
exposed than in individual treatments. One of the controversial matters
pertaining to the group therapist’s role and technique is that of therapist
transparency and how the therapist uses himself in the treatment (Kiesler, 1996;
McCullough, 2002; Yalom and Leszcz, 2005). What should therapists reveal about
themselves, and what should they keep private? Two principles are particularly
important: Therapists should not reveal anything that they are uncomfortable
sharing about themselves; and the only legitimate rationale for the therapist’s
personal disclosure is the conviction that it will facilitate the work of the
group at that moment in time.
Therapists will
have different thresholds for what they are prepared to reveal about
themselves. Rachman (1990) drew the distinction between “judicious”
self-disclosures (appropriate level of detail, focus remains on the client) and
“excessive” self-disclosures (self-aggrandizing stories, shifting the focus to
the therapist). It is also important to note that group therapists reveal
things about themselves in a number of ways, including but not limited to the
following: body posture, voice inflection, what they wear, how they set up
their offices, how they handle fees and other arrangements, and how they
interact with an array of people. All of these are forms of “metacommunication”
that all human beings engage in. We reveal things about ourselves all the time;
effective group therapists are aware of what they are communicating. Group
therapists are more “exposed” than individual therapists because they interact
with a variety of people, who elicit different aspects of their identity,
simultaneously and in front of everyone in the group.
Sometimes
therapist self-disclosure involves telling group members about experiences
outside the group that will hopefully be illuminating in relation to what is
being discussed at a particular point in time. At other times, a therapist
self-disclosure will involve describing his or her experience of someone in the
group. Feedback about the group member’s behavior and interpersonal impact can
be very useful, particularly if it models for the group the process of feedback
and is delivered in a way that is constructive without shaming or blaming the
client. If the therapist and member in question have a positive therapeutic
alliance, and the therapist offers the feedback in a way that indicates interest
and concern rather than anger and a wish to be hurtful, this kind of
intervention can be enormously helpful, not only for the individual in question
but for the group as a whole.
Summary
1. The therapist’s
interventions consist of a range of integrated but distinct actions that are
most effective when they are well balanced with one another: These actions also
establish the norms for group work.
2. The therapist’s
executive functions encompass the coordination of the group and regulation of
the boundaries of the group.
3. The therapist
conveys care directly and also models caring for the group members.
4. The therapist
plays an important role in activating emotion within the group.
5. The activation of
emotion is ideally followed by the attribution of meaning to the group member’s
personal experience.
6. These actions
contribute to the client’s learning and acquisition of insight.
7. The judicious use
of self-disclosure by the therapist can have substantial therapeutic impact.
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©2007 American Group Psychotherapy Association
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