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Recommended Books / Web Sites / Topic-Specific Resources
Definition, Principles, and Evidence / OARS Counseling Style / Rapport, Agendas, and Assessment / Exploring Importance and Building Confidence / Reducing Resistance / Exchanging Information / Putting it all Together
Recommended Books
Health Behavior Change: A Guide for Practitioners (HBC) by Stephen Rollnick, Pip Mason, and Chris Butler
• Motivational Interviewing adapted for medical settings
• Presents a framework for very brief treatment encounters
• Strategies are presented in terms of principles, examples, and counterexamples with an emphasis on practicality.
Read my detailed review
See more information at Amazon.com
Or, if you just want the bare essentials:
Lifestyle Change by Chris Dunn and Stephen Rollnick
• Pocket-size "how-to" guide
• Super-streamlined 3-step model
• Focus on simple, structured techniques to help engage patients in a constructive conversation about change
Read my detailed review
See more information at Amazon.com
And if you really love this stuff, and want an expanded approach with all the theory:
Motivational Interviewing, Second Edition: Preparing People for Change (MI2) by William R. Miller and Stephen Rollnick
• Theoretical underpinnings, empirical evidence
• Some detailed examples of strategies and techniques with an emphasis on general principles
• Specialty settings, populations, topics featured in extensive edited section
Read my detailed review
See more information at Amazon.com
Web Sites
Steve Rollnick's practice-oriented online discussion board
Topic-Specific Resources
Definition, Principles, and Evidence
HBC Chapters 1-2
The article you were given includes most of the same information as in the online slide shows below:
MI may be conceptualized as a particular form of the "guiding" style of communication with patients - see Steve Rollnick and colleagues' recent British Journal of Medicine article for more about incorporating MI into daily practice without over-reliance on structured interventions.
OARS Counseling Style
OARS = Open Questions, Affirmations, Reflective Listening, Summaries.
We glossed over this topic due to time constraints. If you want to brush up your general client-centered counseling skills, try one or more of the following roleplay prompts for practicing OARS with a roleplay buddy. Audiotape and review together. Where could you have used open instead of closed questions? Where could you have used even more reflective listening instead of questioning? Keep roleplays short and focused, and respect the Talker's desire to end the conversation whenever he/she is ready.
- What have you read lately that you would recommend?
- Who in your family are you most like?
- Tell me about a memorable trip you took. What made it memorable?
- What is your dream job?
- What do you like about yourself?
- What is the best advice you ever received?
Rapport, Agendas, and Assessment
HBC Chapter 3
Exploring Importance and Building Confidence
HBC Chapter 4
Audio clip (MP3 format) demonstrating exploration of goals and values as a means to elicit change talk: To download the file, right click on the link, select "save target as," and choose where on your computer you want the file to go. (Mac users, you are on your own)
Exploring values, fruits and vegetables - Demonstration of an MI-based peer counseling program developed by the National Cancer Institute for African-American churches. 4.12MB, 3 minutes. From the Body and Soul peer counselor training DVD.
If you like theory and research, check out a recent series of literature reviews regarding "change talk" - several articles in recent issues of the MINT Bulletin. Look for "what the research says" articles by Grant Corbett in October 2004, May 2005, September 2005 issues.
Reducing Resistance
HBC Chapter 5
Exchanging Information
HBC Chapter 5
My best examples of feedback-based interventions are all addictions-focused. If you know of any online examples feedback-based interventions for health-related behavior, let me know!
Motivational Enhancement Therapy serves as a model for a feedback-based intervention in the addictions. See my resources page for more information about some of the variations.
Reid Hester's online Drinker's Check-up provides feedback regarding alcohol use. Results of a 12-month trial.
Alcoholscreening.org provides similar feedback - but in a less MI-consistent manner - for free.
Audio clips (MP3 format): Some excerpts from a drinker's check-up feedback-based intervention. First (3.31 MB MP3, 2:24 minutes), a brief example of giving personal feedback. Next (5.97 MB MP3, 4:20 minutes), a summary of feedback given over a lengthy session, and example of eliciting change talk and managing resistance (in this case, demoralization more than argumentation). To download the files, right click on the link, select "save target as," and choose where on your computer you want the file to go. (Mac users, you are on your own)
Putting it all Together
HBC Chapter 6, 8
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