Listing 1 - 10 of 24 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Hensikten med denne studien er å få innsikt i hvordan helsesøstrene oppdager og formidler et godt samspill mellom foreldre og barn i alderen 0-3 år. Dessuten er det et mål å få kjennskap til helsesøstrers interesse, kompetanse og muligheter for å gå inn i vanskelige situasjoner i arbeid med foreldre-barn-relasjon. Det kvalitative forskningsintervju er valgt for å samle inn data og det ble gjennomført ti intervjuer av helsesøstrer som representerer fire forskjellige kommuner, og fra åtte forskjellige helsestasjoner i Norge. Alle informanter unntatt en har tatt sin helsesøsterutdanning for mer enn ti år siden. Etter at de tok utdanningen har de stort sett arbeidet som helsesøstrer. Metoden for å analysere datamaterialet er innholdsanalyse i kombinasjon med Kvales tre tolkningsnivåer. Funnene i studien viser at foreldre-barn-samhandling påvirker tilknytningens kvalitet. Barn som opplever en god tilknytning til sine nære omsorgspersoner utvikler en god modell for relasjoner til andre mennesker. God tilknytning betraktes som en viktig faktor for den sosiale, emosjonelle og kognitive utvikling. Samfunnet har i løpet av de ti siste årene vært gjennom store forandringer. Disse forandringene har også påvirket familiemønstrene.Helsetjenesten må i større grad tilpasse seg de nye helsekrav. En konklusjon i studien sier at helsesøstrer kan være viktige omsorgspersoner i situasjoner hvor det er en emosjonell brist i tilknytningen mellom foreldre og barn. Trass i dette viser studiens funn at dette arbeidet lett blir underprioritert p.g.a. alle andre krav og gjøremål som må utføres i løpet av en arbeidsdag. Det er derfor mye som tyder på at denne oppgaven for helsesøstrer med fordel kan styrkes.
Choose an application
The development and evaluation of Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) has been a very rewarding aspect of my academic career, and I am excited to see the program detailed in this excellent clinical guide. PCIT is a short-term intervention with documented effectiveness that has much to offer mental health professionals who work with young behaviorally disordered children. After approximately 12 therapy hours, improvements can be seen in parenting stress levels, parent-child interactional patterns, parenting skills, child disruptiveness, and child compliance. Yet, prior to the publication of this practitioner guide book, relatively few child therapists have had exposure to this innovative treatment approach. The development of PCIT began in the early 1970s. I had recently completed a doctoral program focusing on behavioral parent-training procedures and a postdoctoral experience emphasizing traditional play therapy approaches with children. Despite the wide theoretical gap between these two orientations, I recognized that each had valuable therapeutic elements that could contribute to an overall treatment package. It became an exciting challenge to integrate traditional and behavioral concerns. I was particularly interested in developing a child behavior modification program with strong relationship-based components. The work of my colleague, Constance Hanf, had a direct influence on the development of PCIT. Hanf outlined a two-stage, operant model for modifying the noncompliant behavior of young children. The first stage emphasized following the child's lead and using differential attention during play sessions.
Choose an application
"Untying The Knot sets out to present a clinical approach to cases where the referred patient is a child or adolescent, but in which the parents are intimately involved in the therapeutic situation.Three fundamental principles inform the work: firstly, that early experience influences present lives; secondly, that unconscious feelings and fantasies are elements which shape everyday conscious experience; and thirdly, that the interaction of children and parents leads to patterns which become self-perpetuating and make it virtually impossible to define what is cause and what is effect in their relationship.Dr Brafman acknowledges the pioneering work of Donald Winnicott in the treatment of children, emphasizing particularly his refusal to be bound by rigid notions of treatment modalities, but instead to go to the heart of the matter - an understanding of the child's own confusion and pain, and then, through its elucidation and expression, to bring relief."--Provided by publisher.
Choose an application
Choose an application
Maltraitance conjugale, violence familiale, enfance en danger, agressivité du petit enfant et délinquance juvénile sont souvent liés. Les parents violents rendent violents, jusqu'aux professionnels, incapables de dépasser la réprobation naturelle de l'inacceptable. Le soin apporté à l'enfant ne suffit pourtant pas ; il faut également créer les conditions pour éviter la répétition compulsive et souvent transgénérationnelle de la violence, et pour cela accueillir et accompagner les parents, et particulièrement le parent violent (à 90 % le père). Le point de vue clinique des auteurs prend appui sur une pratique dans la crèche d'un centre accueillant des mères victimes de maltraitance.
Family violence. --- Abused children. --- Parent-child interaction therapy.
Choose an application
Parent-child interaction therapy. --- Behavior therapy. --- Family psychotherapy. --- Child welfare
Choose an application
This newly expanded and revised edition of the Child-Parent Relationship Therapy (CPRT) Treatment Manual is the essential companion to the second edition of Child-Parent Relationship Therapy (CPRT). The second edition is updated to include four new CPRT treatment protocols and parent notebooks adapted for specific populations: parents of toddlers, parents of preadolescents, adoptive families, and the teacher/student relationship, along with the revised original CPRT protocol and parent notebook for ages 310. This manual provides the CPRT/filial therapist a comprehensive framework for conducting CPRT. Included are detailed outlines, teaching aides, activities, and resources for each of the 10 sessions. The manual is divided into two major sections, Therapist Protocol and Parent Notebook, and contains a comprehensive CPRT Training Resources section along with an index to the accompanying Companion Website. The accompanyingCompanion Websitecontains all necessary and supplemental training materials in a format that allows for ease of reproduction and enhanced usability including the following: CPRT Protocol--Ages 3 to 10 and Parent Notebook Toddler Adapted CPRT Protocol and Parent Notebook Preadolescent Adapted CPRT Protocol and Parent Notebook Adoptive Families Adapted CPRT Protocol and Parent Notebook Teacher/Student Adapted Protocol and Teacher Notebook Therapist Study Guide Training Resources, Teaching Aides and Supplemental Materials Marketing Materials Assessments Drawing on their extensive experience as professional play therapists and filial therapists, Bratton and Landreth apply the principles of CCPT and CPRT in this easy-to-follow protocol for practitioners to successfully implement the evidence-based CPRT model. By using this manual and the accompanying Companion Website in conjunction with the CPRT text, filial therapists will have a complete package for training parents in CCPT skills to act as therapeutic agents with their own children.
Parent-child interaction therapy --- Play therapy --- Parent and child
Choose an application
Violence --- Problem solving in children. --- Parenting --- Parent-child interaction therapy --- Prevention.
Choose an application
EARLY ATTACHMENT -- 159.970.2 --- PARENT-CHILD INTERACTION THERAPY -- 159.970.2 --- Parent-child interaction therapy --- Parent-infant psychotherapy --- Parent-infant psychoanalysis --- Parent-infant psychoanalytic therapy --- Infant psychiatry --- PCIT (Child psychotherapy) --- Child psychotherapy
Choose an application
The CPRT Treatment Manual is an essential companion to Child Parent Relationship Therapy (CPRT): A 10-Session Filial Therapy Model (Landreth & Bratton, 2006). The manual has four major sections: Therapist Notebook, Study Guide, Parent Notebook, and Training Resources. An accompanying CD-Rom allows the therapist to print the necessary training materials for ease of reproduction and enhanced usability. The Therapist Notebook contains everything the therapist needs to conduct the 10-session CPRT model, including comprehensive treatment outlines that serve as a guide for the therapist in conducting each session, teaching aids, and activities. The Study Guide provides an in-depth explanation of the content for each training session and helpful hints for conducting CPRT. The Parent Notebook includes all of the printed materials that parents will need to complete CPRT training including worksheets for parents to complete between sessions. The Training Resources section includes supplemental training materials, clinical forms, organizational tools, assessments, marketing materials, and a list of useful CPRT resources organized by videos, books, and manuals. The CPRT Treatment Manual used as a companion with CPRT provides the therapist with a complete package for training parents to act as therapeutic agents with their own children.
Relatietherapie --- Parent and child --- Parent-child interaction therapy --- Play therapy --- Play --- Child psychotherapy --- Recreational therapy --- PCIT (Child psychotherapy) --- Therapeutic use
Listing 1 - 10 of 24 | << page >> |
Sort by
|