Functional Family Therapy (FFT) is an empirically grounded, well-documented and highly successful family intervention program for at risk and delinquent youth who are 11–18 years of age. FFT has been applied to a wide range of at risk youth and their families in various multi-ethnic and multicultural contexts. Target populations range from at-risk preadolescents to youth with very serious problems such as conduct disorder, violent externalizing behaviors and substance-abuse. While FFT targets youth who have often come in contact with the juvenile justice, mental health or child welfare systems, younger siblings of referred youth often become part of the FFT intervention process as well. FFT ranges from, on average, 8 to 12 one-hour sessions for mild situations and up to 30 sessions of direct service for more difficult situations. In most programs, sessions are spread over a three-month period. FFT has been conducted in clinic settings, as an out-patient therapy and as a home-based model.
The FFT clinical model is appealing because of its clear identification of specific phases which organize intervention in a coherent manner, thereby allowing practitioners to maintain focus in the context of considerable family and youth disruption. Each phase includes specific goals, assessment foci, specific techniques of intervention, and practitioner skill sets necessary for success. The phases of FFT are:
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Engagement and Motivation
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- Develop alliances
- Reduce negativity, resistance
- Improve communication
- Minimize hopelessness
- Reduce dropout potential
- Develop family focus
- Increase motivation for change
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Behavior Change
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- Develope and implement individual change plans
- Change presenting delinquency behaviors
- Build relational skills (e.g., communication and parenting)
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Generalization
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- Maintain/generalize change
- Prevent relapses
- Provide community resources necessary to support change
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The data from numerous outcome studies suggests that when applied as intended, FFT can reduce recidivism between 25% and 60%. Additional studies suggest that FFT is a cost-effective intervention that can, when implemented with model-adherence, reduce treatment costs well below that of traditional services and other family-based interventions. The fidelity of the FFT model is achieved by a specific training model and a sophisticated client assessment, tracking, and monitoring system. The FFT program implementation targets clinical teams of up to 8 practitioners who work together by regular clinical training and consultation.
More information on Functional Family Therapy is available at:
Functional Family Therapy Inc.
www.fftinc.com
The Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence
www.colorado.edu
Strengthening America’s Families
http://www.strengtheningfamilies.org/