Case Conceptualization and Treatment Program
Part I: Client Conceptualization
General Background Information of Client
Jake is a 45 year old single white male. He has a degree in engineering but struggles to hold a job for longer than a few months because he is an alcoholic and inevitably shows up for work one morning drunk and is dismissed. He has good people skills and passes interviews easily and well, which is why he has very little problem finding new employment in spite of his employment history. The problem is that he cannot remain sober. He also has an addiction to marijuana. He is tall and well-groomed and in overall good health aside from his addictions with substance abuse. He is also a devout Catholic and feels that his faith is very important to him.
Client’s Presenting Concerns
Jake’s primary issue is combating alcohol addiction. He does not want to stop using marijuana as he feels it helps him with his nerves. He has been using marijuana since he was 16.
Deeper problems are Jake’s issues with responsibility. He talks quite a bit about his faith, about settling down, finding the right woman, and starting a family. However, he also fears that he may have missed the boat on this. He still dreams of being a musician and laments that his authoritarian parents did not encourage him to be an artist but instead pressed him into engineering. He is happy as an engineer and proud of his accomplishments, but at the same time he feels the need to self-medicate quite a bit with alcohol and marijuana. Whenever he gets a new job he always fears that people there are out to sabotage him and he has some paranoia over this.
Jake does recognize a need for change but the change he is proposing is, while not superficial, incomplete. He wants to stop drinking as much as he does—but he is not willing to give up alcohol altogether; nor is he willing to stop using marijuana. It appears that there is some trauma related to his childhood, as he has mentioned that his father abused him physically (not sexually), and when Jake was 20 he did attempt suicide. However, when he drinks through the night he begins to call friends and tell them that he wants to kill himself. One friend has recently tired of this and called the police on Jake. Jake was shocked and instantly showed more self-control. Nothing came of the incident, but it was something of a wake-up call to Jake. He lost his job the next day, as he showed up for work drunk. That also added to the wake-up call.
Behavioral Description
Jake is:
· Outgoing
· Friendly
· Proud of his accomplishments, which he enjoys talking about
· Nervous
· Negative at times without ability to shake negative thoughts/feelings
· Concerned about his alcohol addiction
· Worried about his state in life—single, unmarried, no children
The behaviors that are in need of change are his dependency upon alcohol and his tendency to let negative thoughts and feelings undermine whatever positive direction...
References
Best, D., Beckwith, M., Haslam, C., Alexander Haslam, S., Jetten, J., Mawson, E., & Lubman, D. I. (2016). Overcoming alcohol and other drug addiction as a process of social identity transition: The social identity model of recovery (SIMOR). Addiction Research & Theory, 24(2), 111-123.
Perry, B. D., & Szalavitz, M. (2006). The boy who was raised as a dog: And other stories from a child psychiatrist's notebook – What traumatized children can teach us about loss, love, and healing. New York, NY: Basic Books.
Rogers, C. (1951). Client-Centered Therapy. MA: Riverside Press.
Shriner, B & M. Shriner. (2014). Essentials of Lifespan Development: A Topical Perspective. Bridgepoint Education: San Diego, CA.
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