Examples for how ACT teams may interface and work with individuals’ natural supports:
- Reconnecting with family, whose relationships have long been severed
- Developing skills and opportunities to make friends
- Developing and enhancing parenting skills for ACT service recipients with children
- Educating natural supports about the person’s illness and effective treatments for that illness
- Providing more proactive interventions to address behaviors that may serve to exacerbate individuals’ symptoms
- Developing healthy problem-solving skills
- Helping natural supports truly understand the potential of individuals served, and emphasizing the importance of a recovery-perspective
- Providing resources, including those that may be of help to family (NAMI, ALANON)
- Although not family therapy, being a warm ear to hear the struggles and negative feelings families can experience when a loved one is challenged with severe mental illness
Learn More about how ACT can work with natural supports, including Family Psychoeducation, through these resources.
