Monday, November 22, 2010

007 Action Responses

Action Responses

Another type of therapeutic response is action responses, where the client’s structured reference has more data and perceptions from the counselor. Timing is important in these responses, and they should be used once the client and the counselor have a firm and trusting relationship. Action responses ask questions only with a specific purpose in mind, using open-ended questions (beginning with either what, how, where, or who) to gain more information from the client, focusing with probes on the problems of the client, waiting a moment after questioning the client to give him time to think and answer, limiting questions to one at a time, not using belligerent or blame-oriented questions, not using too many probes at one time (so that the client will feel at ease), using open-ended probes only at the start of the treatment, making sure that questions presented to the client are legitimate and therapeutic, and effectively using these questions to achieve your intended effect.

Sometimes the counselor must confront the client if his messages are unclear or mixed. The purposes of confrontation are to help the client to understand the way that they see themselves, to reveal discrepancies, and to show the client an important point. Before using confrontation, however, there must be strong and trusting relationship between the counselor and the client. Even after the rapport is achieved, the counselor must present the confrontation in a timely manner that is an expressive and tangible thought, behavior, or feeling.

http://addictionsexam.com