One couples assessment One family assessment Needs Assessment Risk assessment
Introduction: For this final assignment, you will start by watching the full 57 minute video Minds on the Edge: Facing Mental Illnesswhich is hyperlinked here and in the Books and Resources section for the course and this week. It can also be found in the Northcentral University library, Films on Demand database. The film presents several different cases. For this final activity, you will assume that one of the cases discussed in the video has been referred to your clinical practice. Your supervisor has instructed you to complete a battery of assessments for this case that you select, and present her with a clinical write-up on this case at your next supervision session. You decide to conduct: One couples assessment One family assessment Needs Assessment Risk assessment For the couples and family assessments, you may use the assessments presented earlier in this course, or you may select a set of different instruments to use. If you choose to use a different couples and/or family assessment, you will need to request approval from your instructor before proceeding. Depending on which case you select to use from the video you will need to be creative and fill in the “rest of the story.” Similar to how presenters in the film were asked to role-play different family member roles, when asked by the discussion facilitator, you will need to place yourself in the role of each family member. Feel free to use some creative license to fill in the rest of the story and characters (i.e., wife, children, parents, etc.) if they were not specifically talked about in the film. While addressing the risk assessment, you are not required to present a formal assessment, but to outline specific warning signs as well a possible safety plan (including specific resources and advised actions) that you will be developing with your client(s). The goal of this assignment is not to correctly guess how the family members might respond to the assessments, but to correctly and appropriately understand what picture is painted by the scores and information gathered during your assessment. You will be graded on your ability to intelligently discuss which assessments you chose and why; what you learned about the family from these assessments; and how this information might be helpful in working with this family in therapy.