Therapeutic Modalities: Grace Lyn de Vivar, Rcrim
Therapeutic Modalities: Grace Lyn de Vivar, Rcrim
Therapeutic Modalities: Grace Lyn de Vivar, Rcrim
BJMP- 1998
BUCOR- 2002
PPA- 200 BC
What is Therapeutic?
Social Learning Treatment
Development of BJMP Therapeutic
Community Program
• The American Drug-Free Hierarchical Concept-
based TC
- It is a self-help movement for the treatment of
substance abusers: primarily using behavioral
modification techniques,
- It is based on self-help principles.
- Understating and compassion is combined with
discipline and hierarchy.
CONCEPT BASED TC HAS FOLLOWING PRINCIPLES:
I. COMMUNITY- Living together in a group showing responsible
concern and belonging is the main agent for therapeutic
change and social learning.
II. HIERARCHY- daily activities take place in a structured setting,
where people 'act as if they have no problems and where
'older' residents serve as role models.
III. CONFRONTATION- negative behavior, which interferes with the
community concepts, values and philosophy is confronted and
put to limit.
IV. SELF-HELP- the resident is the protagonist of his own treatment
process. Other group members can only act as a facilitator
The British Democratic Maxwell Jones-type TC –
It is a small face-to-face residential community using social analysis as its
main tool.
DEMOCRATIC TC HAS FOUR CENTRAL PRINCIPLES:
I. PERMISSIVENESS- Residents can freely express their thoughts and
emotions without any negative repercussions.
II. DEMOCRACY- All residents and staff members have equal chances
and opportunities to participate in the organization of the TC.
III. COMMUNALISM- face to face communication and free interaction to
create a feeling of sharing and belonging.
IV. REALITY TESTING- residents can be, and should be, continually
confronted with their own image as perceived by other clients and
staff members.
What is a Person Deprived of Liberty (PDL)?
The Revised Implementing Rules and Regulations of the Republic Act No.
10575 or The Bureau of Corrections Act of 2013, defined Person Deprived of
Liberty (PDL)a detainee, inmate, or prisoner, or other person under
confinement or custody in any other manner. The promotion of the general
welfare and safeguarding the basic rights of every prisoner incarcerated in the
national penitentiary by promoting and ensuring their reformation and social
reintegration, creating an environment conducive to rehabilitation.
Conceptions of Criminal Rehabilitation
There are five conceptions of rehabilitation of PDLs, they are based on its aim. They
are:
1. Rehabilitation as Anti-Recidivisms
Rehabilitation may share with incapacitation and specific deterrence the aim of
preventing people from committing future crimes, so its aim is not a distinctive
feature.
Rather, its distinctive feature lies in how it gets there, that is, in the means used to
achieve this end. Incapacitation seeks to reduce the likelihood of recidivism through
rendering it physically impossible, for example, by separating the offender from
potential victims, or killing the offender.
2. Rehabilitation as Harm-Reduction
rehabilitation just it is intended to prevent harmful Punishment can be
justified even when it does not have any general deterrent effects, because it
may rehabilitate the offender, that is, reduce the likelihood that the offender
will perform actions that 'either cause serious setbacks to well- being, or pose
a great risk of doing so. It aims at improving offenders' responsiveness to
prudential and moral reasons
3. Rehabilitation as Therapy
The aim of rehabilitation overlaps with those of clinical medicine specifically, given the
focus on mental illnesses and deficits, clinical psychiatry. As with standard medical
treatments, the aim of curing or ameliorating the deficit may be instrumental to the
further aim of benefitting the individual. However, other further aims are also
possible. These may include, for example, preventing re-offending, protecting the
public, or advancing the social good
4. Rehabilitation as Moral Improvement
Punishment is justified as a way to prevent wrongdoing insofar as it can teach
both wrongdoers and the public at large the moral reasons for choosing not
to perform an offense
5. Rehabilitation as Restoration
Rehabilitation is a matter of restoring the offender's social or moral standing in society
or his social or moral relations with others, or fostering the capacities needed for such
restoration. This could include social and vocational capacities as well as moral ones.
Importance of Therapeutic Modalities
• Rehabilitation of the client
• Useful client upon admission in community
(4) Aspects of Therapeutic Modalities
1. Behavioral Aspect
2. Intellectual Aspect
3. Vocational Aspect
4. Emotional Aspect
midterm
Therapeutic Modalities
“RA 7438”
Grace Lyn T. De Vivar, RCrim
(d) Any extrajudicial confession made by a person
arrested, detained or under custodial investigation
shall be in writing and signed by such person in the
presence of his counsel or in the latter's absence, upon
a valid waiver, and in the presence of any of the
parents, elder brothers and sisters, his spouse, the
municipal mayor, the municipal judge, district school
supervisor, or priest or minister of the gospel as chosen
by him; otherwise, such extrajudicial confession shall
be inadmissible as evidence in any proceeding.
Who are the immediate family?
• Proper use of the different tools to address personal issues and concerns and
shape behavior;
• Managing own feelings and learning how to express oneself appropriately;
• Learning how to follow the rules and norms of the community;
• Maximize participation in activities that are appropriate to the resident's need
for growth;
• Learning how to trust the environment by disclosing self to the community and
develop insight in the process;
• Developing positive coping skills to deal with difficult life situations;
• Enhancing educational and vocational skills to make him productive; and
Improve social skills and recognize the importance of other people's help in
shaping behavior.
Phase III- Pre Re-entry
Under regular circumstances, the resident is expected at this stage
to have internalized the TC values and concept to start life afresh.
However, in the jail setting where entry and release are not within
the jail control, residents may not have reached this phase of
treatment before they even leave the jail facility.
1. Coordinator
• A positive role model.
• Deals with the attitudes of the residents and acts as a member of the panel during the
haircut and addresses the resident in general meeting.
• The leader of a team assigned to oversee a specific department, kitchen department
• Responsible for reporting of job changes and recommends cutting off of learning experience
• Assigned as Coordinator on Duty of the day and delegates tasks to be covered for the day,
investigating and booking.
• Encourages residents to use behavior shaping tools, i.e., encounter slips, booking, etc.
• Responsible for overseeing that each team works efficiently. Supervises the overall functions
of the department in the TC Facility.
• Reports to staff any incident that is not in the boundaries of a resident to deal with.
• Carries out any given task that staff members assigned him or her
• In-charge to disseminate instructions given by the Director and staff through coordination
with co- coordinators.
• Serves as liaison between resident and staff.
2. Coordinator On Duty (not part of the whole hierarchical structure, each
coordinator take turns to become Coordinator of the Day)
Probationer
Parole
It is the conditional release of a prisoner from correctional institution after
serving the minimum period of prison sentence.
Parole Process Step
1
Step
2
Step
3
Board of
D Pardons and Disqualified Prison
Parole Qualified Referral
Step
4
Step
5
BPP En Banc Voting Granted Release Document Parolee
Counseling Theories and
1. Humanistic Theories ItApproaches
• There are six major theoretical categories, they are (McAdams, 2022:
holds that people have within themselves all the
resources they need to live healthy and functional lives, and that probléms
occur as a result of restricted or unavailable problem-solving resources
•Humanistic therapists care most about the present and helping their clients
achieve their highest potential. Instead of energy spent on the past or on
negative behaviors, humanists believe in the goodness of all people and
emphasize a person's self-growth and self-actualization .
•This category includes:
• Client-centered Therapy It is also known as person-centered therapy or
Rogerian therapy, It is a non- directive form of talk therapy. In this approach,
the client acts as an equal partner in the therapy process, while the
therapist remains non-directive meaning they don't pass judgments on your
feelings or offer suggestions solutions or The Therapists strive to create the
conditions needed for their clients to change. This involves a therapeutic
environment that is conformable, non- judgmental, and empathetic .
• Gestalt Therapy It is a form of
psychotherapy that is centered on
increasing a person's awareness, freedom,
and self-direction. It focuses on the
present moment rather than past
experiences. It is based on the idea that
people are influenced by their present
environment .
•
• The word gestalt is a German term
that generally means "whole" or "form. " It
is an idea that views every individual as a
• 2. Cognitive Approach This counseling
theory focuses on how people's thinking
can change feelings and behaviors. It is
brief in nature and oriented toward
problem solving.
• It holds that people experience
psychological and emotional difficulties
when their thinking is out of sync with
reality. When this distorted or "faulty"
thinking is applied to problem-solving, the
result understandably leads to faulty
solutions. Cognitive counselors work to
challenge their clients' faulty thinking
• Acceptance and Commitment Therapy It is a type of mindful psychotherapy
that helps a person to stay focused on the present moment and accept
thoughts and feelings without judgment. It aims to help the client to move
forward through difficult emotions so he/she can put their energy into
healing instead of dwelling on the negative.
• ACT therapists operate under a theory that suggests that increasing
acceptance can lead to increased psychological flexibility. The goal of ACT is
not to reduce the frequency or severity of unpleasant internal experiences
like upsetting cognitive distortions, emotions, or urges.
• 3. Psychoanalytic Approach It is also known as the historical perspective, and has
its roots with sigmund Freud, who believed there were unconscious forces that
drive behavior. The techniques he developed, such as free association dream
analysis» and transferences are still used by psychoanalysts today.
• -Dysfunctional thought
• This category includes:
• Adlerian Therapy It is also known as individual therapy, emphasizes the individual's
ability to bring about positive change in his or her own life . Adlerian therapy
consists of four stages: engagement, assessment, insight, and reorientation.
•Four Stages of Adlerian Therapy:
• Engagement. The client and therapist begin to establish the therapeutic
relationship. The relationship should consist of collaboration towards addressing
the client's problems.
• Assessment. The therapist works to learn more about the client's background,
including early memories and family dynamics. In this part of therapy, the therapist
attempts to understand how the client may have developed certain styles of
thinking that are no longer helpful or adaptive for them.
• Insight. The therapist offers an interpretation of the client's situation The therapist
suggests theories about how past experiences may have contributed to issues the
client is currently experiencing, importantly, the therapist leaves it up to the client
to decide whether these theories are accurate and useful .
• Reorientation. The therapist helps the client to develop new strategies that the
• Object Relations Therapy It is centered on
person's internal relationships with
others. The lifelong relationship skills of a
person are strongly rooted in his/her early
attachments with their parents, especially
his/ her mothers. Objects refer to people
or physical items that come to
symbolically represent either a person or
part of a person.
• 4. Constructionist Approach It holds that knowledge is merely an invented
understanding of actual events in the world or "construct" While actual events in the
world can trigger people's meaning-making processes, it is those meaning making
processes, rather than the events themselves, that determine how people think, feel
and behave.
• This category includes:
• Ericksonian Therapy It stresses the importance of the interactive therapeutic
relationship, the partnership and purposeful engagement of the inner resources and
experiential life of each and every individual.
• It holds that indirect suggestion could result in therapeutic behavioral change. He
preferred to converse with clients using metaphors, contradictions, symbols, and
antidotes to influence their behavior rather than direct orders
• Solution Focused Brief Therapy It is a strength-based approach to psychotherapy based
on solution- building rather than problem-solving. Unlike other forms of psychotherapy
that focus on present problems and past causes, SFBT concentrates on the client's
current circumstances and future hopes.
• 5. Systemic Approach It holds that thinking, feeling and behavior are largely
shaped by pressures exerted on people by the social systems within which
they live. Accordingly, individual thinking, feeling and behavior are best
understood when examined in relation to the role they play within a person's
family or other important social networks.
• This category includes:
• Structural Family Therapy It is a type of family therapy that looks at the
structure of a family unit and improves the interactions between family
members.
•It suggests that dysfunctional family relationships can create stress and mental
health problems for members of that family. By addressing how members of
the family relate to one another, the goal is to improve communication and
relationships to create positive changes for both individual family members and
the family unit as a whole.
• Gottman Method Couples Therapy It is a short-term family therapy treatment
that is often used for families with children or adolescents who are dealing
with behavioral issues. It is based on the premise that the family plays the
most important role in the life and development of children.
•This type of therapy seeks to identify and change the structural interaction
patterns that make up the family environment. By addressing family behaviors
and interactions that contribute to problem behavior
Topics Modalities in the Treatment of Offenders
in the Philippines
• Therapeutic Community modality by Parole
and Probation Administration
• How does TC look like?
• What are the Salient Features of TC?
• What is the TC Vision and Mission?
Modalities in the Treatment of Offenders in the Philippines
Like many countries, the correctional system in the
Philippines has both an institution - based and a community
community - based component. It also has separate
treatment systems for youth offenders and adult offenders.
The custodial care of adult offenders is handled by the
following.
BJMP
Provincial Jails
BuCor
What is Therapeutic Community ?