Licensed Marriage and Family Therapists are trained as relationship
specialists who help people transform their relationships with
others and with themselves into healthy, fulfilling experiences.
During the therapy process, adults, children, couples, or families
spend time with a skilled clinician to address concerns which
may be causing distress. The seed for growth and change is perceived
to be within individuals and their relationships. The therapist
acts as a catalyst for the process of individual and interpersonal
growth.
Marriage and family therapy is:
• brief
• solution-focused
• specific, with attainable therapeutic goals
• designed with the "end in mind."
Licensed Marriage and Family Therapists, also known as MFTs
or LMFTs, are clinicians with a minimum of a master's degree
in psychology, clinical psychology, counseling psychology, or
marriage and family therapy.
They are trained to understand family systems and provide counseling
and psychotherapy from a variety of therapeutic orientations
and work with individual adults and children, couples, families,
and groups.
MFTs treat a wide range of clinical problems in both children
and adults. These problems can be serious in nature, such as
in mood disorders, anxiety disorders, psychotic disorders, etc.,
or they can be everyday problems, less serious in nature, such
as improving communication or increasing parenting skills. Issues
are addressed while keeping in mind how they impact functioning
and relationships. Strong and healthy relationships (marital,
family, work, school or social) positively impact functioning
and life fulfillment.
Today more than 50,000 marriage and family therapists treat
individuals, couples and families nationwide.