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SUCCESSES OUTWEIGH CHALLENGES IN FAMILY COUNSELLING

Published 7th January 2021

Buckie Got It,

Basseterre, St. Kitts and Nevis News Source

Basseterre, St. Kitts, January 7, 2020 (SKNIS): Speaking during the radio and television show ‘Working for You’ on January 6, officials from the Counselling Unit within the Ministry of Social Development, said that despite the challenges posed by family counselling, the Counselling Unit has witnessed successes in how families have benefited from its Family Matters Programme. 

The Counselling Unit is piloting the Families Matters Programme (FMP) which is an evidence-based, parent-focused intervention programme funded by the United States Agency for International Development USAID). This programme has been adapted and implemented in countries throughout the world and is designed to promote positive parenting and improve parent-child communication.
 
Member of the Counselling Unit and Family Counsellor, Alicia Collins, said “Our first year was the most challenging year because it was a new approach. No service provider (Counselling Unit staff) was entering into any home. She explained that this was because families were sceptical of their new methods and did not trust their motives.
 
The Director of the Counselling Unit, Michele de la Coudray-Blake, said that the training received from the USAID allowed staff members to change their perspectives on these challenges and take steps in the right direction towards achieving their overall goal of reducing risk factors within the family so as to better protect children.
 
As a result, families were more accepting of the message and welcomed counsellors into their space. The family counsellors interacted with the families, engaging in positive reinforcement of parenting skills.
 
“Children have seen parents who may not have spoken to each other for years, come together and work while developing a different relationship,” Mrs. Blake stated.
 
Another success highlighted was that of parents changing their strategy of discipline as “they moved it away from that punitive way to having more conversations that then yield results.”
 
“We’ve seen young children step up to the plate and be engaged in the household and what’s going on there as well,” she said.
 
She said that these successes were a direct result of engagement through the Families Matters Programme.

L-R: MICHELE de la COUDRAY BLAKE; ALICIA COLLINS

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