
Trauma Can Result In A Variety Of Symptoms And Problems Such As Behavioral Disorders, Emotional Dysregulation, Sleep Disturbances, Recurring Nightmares, Intrusive Thoughts, And Learning And Academic Challenges. Children And Adolescents Who Have Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Are Usually Presented To Therapists In One Of Four Clinical Situations: (1) The Traumatized Child And Parents Request Trauma-focused Therapy, (2) The Child With Trauma History Refuses Treatment, (3) A Parent Is Impaired By Their Own Trauma History But Does Not Want To Receive Treatment, (4) A Child Has Experienced Trauma But The Parent Wants To Focus On A Behavioral Issue And Symptoms Rather Than The Trauma. Family Therapy For Treating Trauma Offers A Stand-alone Family Therapy Approach For Trauma Survivors And Provides A Cross-culturally Competent Family Treatment Framework For Working With Trauma. It Outlines Both How To Assess Family Patterns That Reinforce Or Exacerbate Effects Of Trauma And How To Mobilize The Healing Power Of Family Relationships To Moderate Or Resolve Effects Of Trauma. Via An Integrative Approach, The Book Offers Flexible Ways To Adapt To Client Choices So As To Enhance Difficult To Engage Clients And Families. It Serves As A Resource For Professional Audiences And Can Be Offered As A Text For Courses On Both Family Therapy And Trauma Treatment.
This book investigates how family-based therapeutic interventions can be systematically applied to treat trauma in children and adolescents. The authors, David R. Grove, Gilbert J. Greene, and Mo Yee Lee, utilize their clinical expertise to present an integrative framework that addresses the complex interplay between individual trauma and family dynamics. By focusing on the family unit as a primary site for healing, the text provides a structured methodology for clinicians to navigate resistance and foster recovery in diverse populations.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Clinicians and students frequently identify this work as a practical, highly applicable resource for navigating the complexities of trauma-focused family sessions. Experts highlight the authors' ability to bridge the gap between theoretical trauma models and the day-to-day realities of clinical practice.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190059419
ISBN-13:
9780190059415
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