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Marriage and Family
Therapy Facts
- MFT originated about 60 years ago when health care clinicians
began to seek more effective and comprehensive ways to treat disorders
such as schizophrenia, anorexia and alcoholism.
- MFTs work with individuals, groups, couples, and families, and
focus on the power of the family system as an instrument of change and
healing.
- MFTs treat the client's relationships within systems (e.g.
families, couples, schools, work and cultures) as a way of understanding
the development of dysfunctional patterns.
- MFTs view relational systems as frequent sources of stress and
symptom formation.
- MFTs come from a wide variety of backgrounds, such as medicine,
psychology, psychiatry, nursing and social work.
- MFTs frequently treat such mental health disorders as anxiety,
depression, substance abuse, adjustment disorders, marriage and family
conflict, and behavioral disorders in children and adolescents, among
others.
- MFTs have historically been trained to work within 20 session
"brief therapy" time frames.
- MFTs recognize that while disorders have relational
consequences, treatment often must include psychiatric consultation,
medication, psychological testing and individual psychotherapy.
- MFTs in Connecticut became licensed in 1995.
- MFTs in Connecticut are assured confidentiality of clinical
records as a result of the 1992 Privileged Communication Bill.
- MFTs in Connecticut received vendorship in 1992. This bill
requires that eligible licensed MFTs receive third party reimbursement on
the same basis as the other four state-regulated mental health providers.
- There are close to 900 CAMFT members in Connecticut. For
specifics about working with a Marriage and Family Therapist, press here.
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