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Who Are Marriage and Family Therapists?
- Marriage and family therapists (MFTs) are mental health professionals
who offer a range of effective and cost-efficient services to individuals,
couples and families. Marriage and family therapists pioneered brief,
solution-focused, family-centered treatment, which seeks to pinpoint
problems and conclude therapy as soon as specific, attainable therapeutic
goals are met.
Therapies used by MFTs are based on the scientific findings that individuals
and their problems are best seen in context, and the most important context
is the family. Trained in psychotherapy and family systems, MFTs focus on
understanding their clients' symptoms, and the interaction patterns with
family and friends that may contribute to the problem. MFTs will typically
ask questions about roles, patterns, rules, goals, beliefs and stages of
development. The MFT then works with the individual, couple and/or family to
change interaction patterns so that the problem can be resolved.
- Marital and family therapies are proven to be particularly effective in
the treatment of adult schizophrenia, adult alcoholism and drug abuse,
depression in women, adult hypertension, elderly dementia, adult obesity,
children's conduct disorders, adolescent drug use, anorexia in young adult
women, chronic physical illness in adults and children, and marital distress
and conflict.
- Consumers increasingly seek the services of MFTs. In a recent study
consumers reported that marriage and family therapists are the mental health
professionals they would most likely recommend to friends. Clients of
marriage and family therapists report high satisfaction with their
treatment. In a national sample survey, over 98 percent of clients rated MFT
services as good or excellent.
- Marriage and family therapy is a distinct discipline with graduate and
undergraduate programs granting degrees in marriage and family therapy.
Historically, however, marriage and family therapists have come from a wide
variety of educational backgrounds including psychology, psychiatry, social
work, nursing, pastoral counseling, and education.
- Marriage and family therapy is one of the nation's fastest growing
health care professions. Since 1970 there has been a 50-fold increase in the
number of marriage and family therapists. Today more than 50,000 MFTs treat
individuals, couples and families nationwide. Marriage and family therapy is
one of the nation's fastest growing health care professions.
- The federal government has designated MFT as a core mental health
profession along with psychiatry, psychology, social work and psychiatric
nursing. States also support the profession by licensing or certifying MFTs.
Currently, 41 states regulate MFTs, with many other states considering
licensing bills.
- Marriage and family therapists work in all areas of mental and physical
health care, often providing interdisciplinary connections for more
comprehensive treatment. MFTs practice in hospitals, clinics, agencies,
schools, private practice and colleges and universities. They serve as
clinicians, supervisors, administrators, consultants and teachers in the
fields of health care, corrections, education, adoption and social service.
The above information provided by:
The American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy
1133 15th Street NW Suite 300 Washington, DC 20005-2710
Phone: (202) 452-0109 » Fax: (202) 223-2329
Home Page » www.aamft.org
Document-on-Request: 1-888-AAMFT99. This is document #060.
Copyright 1997, American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy. All rights
reserved.
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