ADMINISTRATIVE
SUPPORT
By now it is probably apparent that the
activities described herein require substantial administrative support from
the treatment facility. Many of the points below are enlarged upon in
Chapter 16.
Principle 20.. The treatment agency. must have
flexible policies to allow therapist
flexibility. The most obvious example of this principle concerns
therapists' working hours. Families, especially those with low incomes
and/or multiple problems, cannot always get time off to engage in
treatment during the 9 to 5 workday. In addition, the working
member(s) are sometimes on an evening or night shift, further complicating the
scheduling problem. Berg and Rosenblum' ' found
that the "work schedule- was the most frequently given reason for the father's failure to become
engaged in treatment. These authors also obtained a positive correlation
between the per-centage of families
successfully engaged and the lateness of the hour the therapist was able to see them. They state,
-Family therapists must be more
flexible in the hours that they see a family and the agency for which they work must accommodate this
flexibility-(p. 91). We feel this is
even more crucial for the recruitment effort. When trying to engage a family, there is even greater need to meet them on their turf, and be able to contact them
when they are available, usually at
night. Consequently, the agency must not only allow, but must encourage late, long, and irregular hours if family enlistment is a goal.
There are other ways in which the agency can be
flexible. For instance, simply allowing therapists easy access to the telephone can be important, since this is
such a crucial instrument in the recruit-ment effort. Regular
consultation time from supervisors can be help-ful, especially when a
therapist has reached an impasse or is trying to figure out ways of
obtaining leverage with a family. As before, permitting staff to function
in the dual role of therapist-drug coun-selor may also be pivotal. Finally,
flexibility in the kind of services offered, such as job counseling, may be
necessary to allow the thera-pist to make commitments to the family during
the goal-tailoring process.
Principle
21: The treatment agency must be willing to back up the recruitment effort through commitment of tangible resources.
While related to Principle 20, this goes beyond
flexibility, per se, and refers to the
allocation of real monies and related resources for recruitment. It is not enough to tell a therapist
to -do your thing," since his time also costs the agency money. The
therapist must be given clear
indication of the importance attached to recruiting, so that he is not,
for example, penalized on his caseload quota while trying to engage a particularly resistant family. Nighttime
hours must also be rewarded. A
possible way of handling this is to count recruiting time as patient contact
time, and unsuccessful attempts to reach family members as -treatment backup- time. Another option is to credit evening hours as compensatory time. In addition,
coverage of travel expenses for home
visits may be necessary. Other areas for commit-ment of agency resources have been mentioned earlier, such as the provision of incentives for successfully'
recruited cases, the use of
beepers during the engagement
process, and payment to families for
parking
expenses.
DISCUSSION
EFFECTIVENESS OF
ENGAGEMENT
It is beyond the scope of this chapter to give
data on the success of each of the
recruiting principles. Only overall results will be pre-sented. It is worth noting that Black families
were more difficult to recruit, and
that the recruitment effort—including those successfully and unsuccessfully engaged—required a median of
5.4 direct contacts (telephone or
face-to-face) over a median of 20.5 days. A more detailed analysis of the factors leading to successful recruitment, and the cost-effectiveness of our efforts, has been
published elsewhere.'69
For the present
purposes, the term -engager- will be used to denote those families who
participated in the initial Family Evalu-ation Session. The term -refuser- will
refer to families in which one or
more family members refused to participate in such a session. Out of a total sample of 92 eligible families, we were
able to recruit 71% (i.e., there were
65 engagers and 27 refusers).
An important variable was whether the
IP gave us permission to contact his family directly (Principle 4). As noted in Chapter 3, in the 74
cases where such permission was
granted, 88% of the families were successfully en-gaged. Put another way, two-thirds of our failures
occurred when we could not get past
the IP. The reasons why we think this occurred have been presented earlier in this chapter. Sager et at 26 experienced similar difficulty
with single persons, and recommended spending -a great deal of time working through individual problems with the identified patient so that he does not experience
family therapy as an attempt to return
him to his original difficult family situation-(p. 720). These authors also noted that patients who had difficulty accepting the importance of their families in their
problem were also more likely to drop
out of treatment prematurely.
The dual role of having therapists also serve as
drug counselors deserves special
mention. Before this procedure was implemented our recruitment success rate was 56%. Afterward the rate rose to 77%. Under the dual role, therapists required fewer
contacts (mean of 6.4 vs. 7.2), a shorter period of time (median of 17 days vs.
33 days),* and fewer home visits (11%
vs. 48% ) in order to get families into treatment. More important, our
datai69 document that recruiting families
under the dual role was more than twice aS cost-efficient than when both a therapist and drug counselor were
involved in the recruitment process.
The rate of success
with which these families were engaged in treatment is considerably higher than other reports in the literature with similar clients. This is especially true
considering (1) the clients' predominantly
lower socioeconomic status,[26- 1" (2) the severity of their addictive problems, and (3) the fact that,
unlike nearly all of the earlier
studies, we considered a case to be successfully recruited only if both parents or parent surrogates appeared together at
the treatment site; most other studies
satisfied themselves with one parent or a spouse. These results, then, offer general support for the
aforemen-tioned principles, as well as for the effectiveness of the major
effort applied to recruitment.