| As social welfare and social security system to develop,families of children with disabilities are more concerned by society.Compared with normal families,the unstable family structure makes it difficult for disabled children to communicate with their families,which is more likely to induce parent-child conflict.The parent-child conflict affects the normal life of the family to a certain extent,even the growth status of disabled children.Social work in family interaction helps to reduce conflict between the family members.By the Satir Model,the social worker take the case work as a working method,and used in-depth interviews,case studies,participatory observation,and questionnaires to data collection.the social worker developed social work case intervention plans and goals,and carried out nine casework sessions using techniques such as family talks,family sculpture,temperature reading techniques,and Satir meditation according to the three stages of the human identity process.The research aims to help family members correctly understand the fact that children with disabilities are disabled,relieve the anxiety of children and their family members,and guide parents to realize the negative impact of family atmosphere on the growth of children with disabilities.the social worker used relevant technologies to help children and their family members break existing communication patterns,rebuild family rules,build and consolidate consistent communication patterns,and ultimately relieve and eliminate the anxiety of children and their family members to promote their growth.Afterwards,the social worker proved that Satir Model has a positive effect on relieving the anxiety of family members of disabled children through pre-test and post-test evaluation.Meanwhile,the family system is also functioning well,and children with disabilities can grow up much better.Finally,the social worker reflected on the innovation and shortcomings of this research,and provided some practical experience for the social worker to intervene in the families of disabled children. |