Abstract

ABSTRACT The 2020 COVID-19 pandemic and resulting stay at home orders halted face-to-face in-home therapy for youth at risk of out-of-home placement in Pennsylvania and Delaware. Three family therapy training centers collaborated with state officials managed care organizations, and supervisors to create a two-step process for orchestrating an abrupt, unwanted shift to technology-assisted intensive in-home family therapy. The first step encouraged supervisors to set the stage for this change through an ethics-based lens. The central tenet was to tenaciously advance the wellbeing of the child and their family. The second step encouraged supervisors to remain grounded in the basic principles of treatment and supervision that they followed before telehealth, but with a few adaptations. Three principles are emphasized. Principle one focused on securing clinician commitment to a adapting a family therapy model to a telehealth format. Principle two focused on an unremitting adherence to a preferred family therapy model by using a checklist adapted for technology-based challenges. Finally, principle three focused on fostering professional competence through attending to case conceptualization, supervision-based practice, person-of-the-self challenges, and family-clinician-supervisor isomorphic patterns. Two case examples illustrate the beginning and ending phases of technology-assisted intensive in-home family therapy. Based on feedback from in-home agencies, implementation of these two-steps helped supervisors effectively lead pandemic-induced, practice-based change to a telehealth format with intentionality, conviction, and self-efficacy.

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