Introduction My assignment consists of a report covering a follow-up with a previous “patient” of mine. In the first session we discussed her drinking problem which were treated with Solution Focused therapy. Scaling, goal setting, exceptions, task setting and the miracle question were used to address the problem. In the second session I will we evaluating her progress to determine whether she has improved or not. The second session The focus of second the session is to facilitate my client (Bianca) to expand and notice changes that were observed or have happened between the two sessions. A classic question is the “What is better?” question. I asked her whether anything has improved, even if it was only a little bit, since the last time …show more content…
An essential skill is to encourage Bianca to describe her minor changes in great detail in order to change the “ordinary” into “extraordinary” (Horbay, n.d). Another vital therapeutic task in this session is to help her see the connection between her thoughts, feelings, behaviors, and her desired solutions (Horbay, n.d). I asked Bianca whether her relationship with her friends have improved, where she merely replied: “I do not know, it is probably the same.” Due to her ongoing addiction her friendship with others has not improved. Her anger and attitude levels are still high which is preventing her from improving. She added that she is working on her anger problems- she would rather stop the argument, than encourage …show more content…
The objectives of termination is to review Bianca’s goals and discuss progress, facilitate her to take and own full credit for her positive changes and improvements, assist her in developing connections between her positive change efforts and actions, and assist Bianca in establishing signs of relapse and follow-up procedures (Ratner,George & Iveson, 2012: 24-25) Similar to the first session, I used scaling questions to help her evaluate the differences in her presenting problem between now and the first session. When we first met, her drinking problem was between four and five. Today I asked her the same question, where she responded: “I think it is still the same, maybe a four”. Even though there was not much of a difference, the severity level dropped from a four and a half to a four. In addition, I used scaling questions to evaluate Bianca’s confidence in her ability to maintain change. During the first session she gave herself an eight and a half, today she rated herself as a seven. I assured her that recovery takes time, and that there is nothing wrong with her. Even though her progress is slow, the important thing is that there is in fact