Abstract
Attempting family therapy in the context of a family‐clinician system poses extreme difficulties for the therapist. He cannot be effective if he diagnoses only the family system. He must broaden his analysis to include other clinicians' transactions with the family. Once he accomplishes this perceptual leap, he can intervene in the family‐clinician system most effectively with paradoxical methods. He may find that a change in his own contribution to the system solves the family's problem.

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