Hope for Children of Trauma: An international perspective
Autor Panos Vostanisen Limba Engleză Paperback – 13 mar 2018
The book covers a historical and research overview of developments in trauma and child mental health, global policy and evidence on the impact of trauma on child mental health. In particular, this book communicates real experiences through narratives and supporting photographic material from children in slum areas, orphanages or on the streets, and explores the application of therapeutic approaches by frontline practitioners, therapeutic interventions, service development and training programmes.
Integrating testimonies, observations, therapeutic interventions and research findings, Hope for Children of Trauma shows how these problems can be addressed, and will be thought-provoking reading for child and adolescent mental health practitioners, NGOs and policy-makers.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781138205659
ISBN-10: 1138205656
Pagini: 174
Ilustrații: 2 Line drawings, black and white; 18 Halftones, black and white
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1138205656
Pagini: 174
Ilustrații: 2 Line drawings, black and white; 18 Halftones, black and white
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate and ProfessionalCuprins
Hope for Children of Trauma: A World Journey
Panos Vostanis
Taylor & Francis
Table of Contents
PREFACE
CHAPTER 1: Ever Changing Approaches to Child Trauma
Evolving concepts and attitudes towards children, trauma and mental health
Complex trauma and its correlates
Status and sources of evidence
The whole is larger than the sum of parts: Why service modelling matters
CHAPTER 2: Impact of Trauma on Child Mental Health
The complex relationship between vulnerability and trauma
Nature and extent of mental health problems
Changing approaches to vulnerability and resilience
The increasing influence of socioecological and resilience theories
Inter-linked vulnerability and resilience factors through an ecological lens
Conceptualizing resilience systems and their interactions
CHAPTER 3: Child Vulnerability in a Global Context
How much can we alter a child’s life trajectory?
High-income countries: Policy, evidence and emerging models, but "not everything that shines is gold"
The constant flux of middle-income countries
Low-income, developing or third world countries?
CHAPTER 4: Looking for Answers: From Birmingham Shelters to Mumbai Slums
Societal, cultural and economic changes
Advances in practice and therapeutic approaches
Service models: The weakest link
Why hard-to-reach groups are also hard to research
Principles and components of high-income countries service model for vulnerable children
Why can we not just translate this model to low- and middle-income countries?
CHAPTER 5: The Road to WACIT
A Trail Blazer into the unknown
Nearly impossible question, or just our own ignorance?
Exploring readiness of systems and communities, strengths and challenges
Partnerships, evidence and the preliminary WACIT model
Building the model: The second WACIT phase
The 6 Continents in 6 Weeks launch: More than mere symbolism
CHAPTER 6: Level 1: Children’s Safety should Permeate Policy, Attitudes and Environments
Levels and thresholds of safety
Policy and legislation
Implementation in child care practice
Shifting attitudes
Thinking ‘child’, ‘vulnerability’ and ‘mental health’
Physical environments and people cannot be disentangled
Interprofessional training means interprofessional care
CHAPTER 7: Nurturing Attitudes and Approaches
Parents and extended family
Kinship care: Within-family or external placement?
Adoptive parents: from assessment to permanency
The wide spectrum of residential care staff needs
Community practitioners’ multiple roles
CHAPTER 8: Building Resilience at School and in the Community
Life never stops in the therapy room
School-based interventions
Involving communities: Exciting but largely untested opportunities
The role of mentors
A new experience of belonging
Linking emotional literacy with a business nous
The power of religion, religiosity and spirituality
CHAPTER 9: Application of Therapeutic Approaches
‘Therapeutic’: A widely used and often misunderstood word
Psychoeducation
Behavioural strategies
Family and attachment-based approaches
Trauma-focused strategies: Usually expected, but where does one start and stop?
Cognitive-behavioural and other applications
CHAPTER 10: Therapeutic Interventions
Making sense of traumatic memories
Therapeutic relief by touching upon the trauma
Indications and misunderstandings of medication
Multimodal programmes and principles
CHAPTER 11: Always a Service Model, whatever the Constraints
Absence of service modelling
Policy encompassing vulnerability
The more ‘inter’ the better, but without dilution
From joint care pathways to joint care plans
No need for specialists, but rather for specialist competencies
The importance of indirect service activities
Genuine user participation
Are we making impact? The ever growing and changing role of service evaluation
High-income countries (HIC)
Low- and middle-income countries (LMIC)
CHAPTER 12: Training in a Service Context
Service connotations and principles
Inter-connectedness between training and service provision
Learning objectives and format of delivery
Trauma-related awareness and foundation knowledge
Continuous professional development (CPD) or lifelong learning
Optimizing the deceptively scary use of new technologies
Organizational issues to be considered
EPILOGUE
BOOK REFERENCES BY CHAPTER
Panos Vostanis
Taylor & Francis
Table of Contents
PREFACE
CHAPTER 1: Ever Changing Approaches to Child Trauma
Evolving concepts and attitudes towards children, trauma and mental health
Complex trauma and its correlates
Status and sources of evidence
The whole is larger than the sum of parts: Why service modelling matters
CHAPTER 2: Impact of Trauma on Child Mental Health
The complex relationship between vulnerability and trauma
Nature and extent of mental health problems
Changing approaches to vulnerability and resilience
The increasing influence of socioecological and resilience theories
Inter-linked vulnerability and resilience factors through an ecological lens
Conceptualizing resilience systems and their interactions
CHAPTER 3: Child Vulnerability in a Global Context
How much can we alter a child’s life trajectory?
High-income countries: Policy, evidence and emerging models, but "not everything that shines is gold"
The constant flux of middle-income countries
Low-income, developing or third world countries?
CHAPTER 4: Looking for Answers: From Birmingham Shelters to Mumbai Slums
Societal, cultural and economic changes
Advances in practice and therapeutic approaches
Service models: The weakest link
Why hard-to-reach groups are also hard to research
Principles and components of high-income countries service model for vulnerable children
Why can we not just translate this model to low- and middle-income countries?
CHAPTER 5: The Road to WACIT
A Trail Blazer into the unknown
Nearly impossible question, or just our own ignorance?
Exploring readiness of systems and communities, strengths and challenges
Partnerships, evidence and the preliminary WACIT model
Building the model: The second WACIT phase
The 6 Continents in 6 Weeks launch: More than mere symbolism
CHAPTER 6: Level 1: Children’s Safety should Permeate Policy, Attitudes and Environments
Levels and thresholds of safety
Policy and legislation
Implementation in child care practice
Shifting attitudes
Thinking ‘child’, ‘vulnerability’ and ‘mental health’
Physical environments and people cannot be disentangled
Interprofessional training means interprofessional care
CHAPTER 7: Nurturing Attitudes and Approaches
Parents and extended family
Kinship care: Within-family or external placement?
Adoptive parents: from assessment to permanency
The wide spectrum of residential care staff needs
Community practitioners’ multiple roles
CHAPTER 8: Building Resilience at School and in the Community
Life never stops in the therapy room
School-based interventions
Involving communities: Exciting but largely untested opportunities
The role of mentors
A new experience of belonging
Linking emotional literacy with a business nous
The power of religion, religiosity and spirituality
CHAPTER 9: Application of Therapeutic Approaches
‘Therapeutic’: A widely used and often misunderstood word
Psychoeducation
Behavioural strategies
Family and attachment-based approaches
Trauma-focused strategies: Usually expected, but where does one start and stop?
Cognitive-behavioural and other applications
CHAPTER 10: Therapeutic Interventions
Making sense of traumatic memories
Therapeutic relief by touching upon the trauma
Indications and misunderstandings of medication
Multimodal programmes and principles
CHAPTER 11: Always a Service Model, whatever the Constraints
Absence of service modelling
Policy encompassing vulnerability
The more ‘inter’ the better, but without dilution
From joint care pathways to joint care plans
No need for specialists, but rather for specialist competencies
The importance of indirect service activities
Genuine user participation
Are we making impact? The ever growing and changing role of service evaluation
High-income countries (HIC)
Low- and middle-income countries (LMIC)
CHAPTER 12: Training in a Service Context
Service connotations and principles
Inter-connectedness between training and service provision
Learning objectives and format of delivery
Trauma-related awareness and foundation knowledge
Continuous professional development (CPD) or lifelong learning
Optimizing the deceptively scary use of new technologies
Organizational issues to be considered
EPILOGUE
BOOK REFERENCES BY CHAPTER
Notă biografică
Panos Vostanis is a is Professor of Child Mental Health at the University of Leicester and Visiting Professor at University College London.
Descriere
Hope for Children of Trauma: A World Journey synthesizes all the existing evidence, policy and practice from around the world for children and youth who have experienced different forms of complex trauma - such as abuse, neglect and war violence - and also presents a real advance in the literature, by covering new material from the author’s extensive visits and collaborations in low- and middle-income countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America.