teach the significant other throughout therapy how to help support change and overcome obstacles to therapeutic improvement.
Learn and implement organization, planning, and time management skills. (30, 31, 32, 33)
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Teach the client organization and planning skills, including the routine use of a calendar and daily task list.
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Develop with the client a procedure for classifying and managing mail, other relevant paperwork and files, as well as scheduled appointments.
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Teach the client problem-solving skills (i.e. identify problem, brainstorm all possible options, evaluate the pros and cons of each option, select best option, implement a course of action, and evaluate results) as an approach to planning; for each plan, break it down into manageable time-limited steps to reduce the influence of distractibility (or supplement with “Getting Organized” in the Addiction Treatment Homework Planner by Lenz, Finley, & Jongsma).
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Assign homework asking the client to apply problem-solving skills to an everyday problem (i.e. impulse control, anger outbursts, mood swings, staying on task, attentiveness); review and provide corrective feedback toward improving the skill (or supplement with “Problem Solving: An Alternative to Impulsive Action” in the Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner by Jongsma & Bruce).
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Learn and implement skills to reduce the disruptive influence of distractibility. (34, 35, 36, 37)
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Assess the client's typical attention span by having him/her/them do a few boring tasks (e.g. sorting bills, reading something uninteresting) to the point that he/she/they report distraction; use this as an approximate measure of his/her/their typical attention span.
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Teach the client stimulus control techniques that use external structure (e.g. lists, reminders, files, daily rituals) to improve on-task behavior; remove distracting stimuli in the environment; encourage the client to self-reward for successful focus and follow-through.
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Teach the client to break down tasks into meaningful smaller units that are likely to be completed without interruption by distraction based on his/her/their demonstrated attention span.
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Teach the client to use timers or other cues to remind him/her/them to cease a task before he/she/they become distracted, in an effort to reduce the frequency of distraction and off-task actions (see Mastery of Your Adult ADHD – Therapist Guide by Safren et al.).
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Identify, challenge, and change self-talk that contributes to maladaptive feelings and actions. (38, 39, 40)
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Use cognitive therapy techniques to help client identify maladaptive self-talk and/or underlying assumptions (e.g. “I must do this perfectly,” “I can do this later,” “I can't organize all these things”); challenge biases, generate alternatives, and do behavioral experiments to reinforce the validity of the alternatives (see Cognitive Behavior Therapy by Beck; or supplement with “Negative Thoughts Trigger Negative Feelings” in the Adult Psychotherapy Homework Planner by Jongsma & Bruce).
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Use Metacognitive Therapy to examine the client's “thinking about his/her/their thinking” (i.e. the meaning he/she/they place on his/her/their vulnerabilities associated with ADHD and his/her/their thoughts about how to respond to them accordingly) toward developing a more adaptive plan based on new, less maladaptive metacognitive appraisals (see Metacognitive Therapy for Anxiety and Depression by Wells).
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Assign homework asking the client to implement cognitive knowledge and skills in relevant tasks; review, reinforcing strengths and problem-solve obstacles toward sustained, effective use.
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Acknowledge procrastination and the need to reduce it. (41)
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Assist the client in identifying positives and negatives of procrastinating toward the goal of motivating him/her/them to work on staying goal-oriented and task-focused.
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Learn and implement skills to reduce procrastination. (42, 43, 44, 45)
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Teach the client to apply problem-solving skills to planning as a first step in overcoming procrastination; for each plan, break it down into manageable time-limited steps to reduce the influence of distractibility and increase the likelihood of successful completion.
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Teach the client to apply new cognitive restructuring skills to challenge thoughts that encourage the use of procrastination (e.g. “I can do this later” or “I'll finish this after I watch my TV show”)
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