Children In Families at Risk: Maintaining the Connections: Maintaining The Connections

Author:   Lee Combrinck-Graham
Publisher:   Guilford Publications
ISBN:  

9780898628524


Pages:   429
Publication Date:   12 September 1995
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


Our Price $145.20 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Children In Families at Risk: Maintaining the Connections: Maintaining The Connections


Add your own review!

Overview

In her previous, highly acclaimed book Children in Family Contexts, Lee Combrinck-Graham and her colleagues bridged the fields of child therapy and family therapy with an exploration of basic issues. Building upon that work, this volume describes actual programs that are based on the notion that family connections are substantial resources for healing and recovery even when the family is a very troubled one. With a particular focus on work with severely fractured families, most of these programs attempt to keep children connected with their own families, even when circumstances prevent them from living together. Each program is fully detailed to include a complete description, a discussion of the value of this approach, and at least one actual example to illustrate how it works. This book is aimed at all mental health practitioners who work with children and families, as well as child welfare workers, policy-makers, teachers, attorneys, and family court judges. It also serves as a text for advanced courses in family therapy, child psychotherapy, and school psychology.

Full Product Details

Author:   Lee Combrinck-Graham
Publisher:   Guilford Publications
Imprint:   Guilford Publications
Dimensions:   Width: 16.50cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 24.10cm
Weight:   0.718kg
ISBN:  

9780898628524


ISBN 10:   0898628520
Pages:   429
Publication Date:   12 September 1995
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

Table of Contents

Reviews

For any human service professional working with children and their families, this book is essential reading. -- Contemporary Psychology The book makes a substantial new contribution to the field of child welfare. It is readable, well-organized, and coherent and has a useful index...this book is unique in providing varied program descriptions in one source. -- Social Work Scholarly but readable, this book could serve as a text for advanced courses in family therapy and child psychotherapy. Child welfare workers, policy-makers, teachers, attorneys and family-court judges will also find much to think about in these pages. -- Child and Family Behavior Therapy At last, an exciting look at what programmatic interventions work to maintain or reunify families at risk as well as to further child-family connections when institutionalization, incarceration, or foster care exists. Children in Families at Risk is an inspiring book which engenders hope and confidence in the inherent competence of families and communities to work together against great odds. Administrators and clinicians who struggle to address the seemingly unsolvable concerns of fragmenting families will find here a remarkable combination of practical advice and clear conceptual thinking about treatment programs which effectively maintain family ties. --Marion Lindblad-Goldberg, Ph.D., Director, Family Therapy Training Center and Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Dr. Combrinck-Graham has done a magnificent job....She has created a work that offers a wide array of practical possibilities for address to this most vexing of social problems, the anti-social child and the troubled family, possibilities that inspire thinking and allow for the entry of hope. Her authors, 26 of them, each the innovator or the manager of a novel program, tell of a wide spectrum of efforts to apply the best in science and in clinical skill along with the most compassionate of ethical efforts toward the melioration of the personal, familial, and social distress arising from the troubled backgrounds of so many youngsters....The many pages of clinical description are in themselves an education for the practitioner. How to structure treatment for a fragmented and abusing family, how to deal with the multiple complex agency issues, how to address a highly disturbed family, what to emphasize first, what to say and what not to say, what to skirt at the outset so as to strengthen the family enough that it will be able eventually to face what it must, these and many other basic considerations are illustrated through the rich servings of therapeutic exchange offered in many of the chapters....The richness and the variety of the attempts to find answers and the readiness to structure programs around things that work rather than doctrinaire ideas give this book its energy and its bounce. --Joseph D. Noshpitz, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, George Washington University, Washington, D.C. Children in Families at Risk is a challenging state-of-the-art source book for practitioners, scholars, teachers, and policymakers. By assembling useful, candid reports from those in the field, the Editor has recognized that when families are under siege their children are at risk of being destroyed or blocked severely in their forward development. These reports describe the efforts of children and their parents to adapt, to survive, and to assert their needs; and they describe the painful, merciless costs to them, their families, their communities and to all our society. Each section and chapter of this book searches for and reports on the rich resources of all these children and their families, whose potential is being distorted and destroyed by a society that knows how to thwart but does not know how to preserve and prioritize its wealth of cultural, economic, and human resources. Each program, in its own way and with its own resources and limitations, attempts to maximize the healthy assets and recovery potentials of the multigeneration, multiproblem families to which they relate themselves in respectful, inviting ways. We are indebted to Lee Combrinck-Graham for fascinating and challenging descriptions of the choices we make and the choices we could make. --Albert J. Solnit, M.D., Sterling Professor Emeritus, Pediatrics and Psychiatry, Senior Research Scientist and Commissioner, Department of Mental Health, State of Connecticut There is a rumor abroad in the land that children with severe emotional, mental, or behavioral disorders are best treated in their families--even families in pain or under severe stress. It is a spontaneous discovery that is being made by professionals, providers, advocates from across the spectrum of child-serving agencies and programs--and by the families themselves! It is thought of as a paradigm shift in our thinking about troubled and troubling children. Lee Combrinck-Graham has orchestrated a remarkable set of essays that comprise both a handbook of creative and innovative practices in children's mental health, and an exposition of these profound changes by workers in the trenches' of our child-caring agencies. This is evidence from the front line that the paradigm has shifted! --Robert F. Cole, Ph.D., Director, National Resource Network for Child and Family Mental Health Services, Washington Business Group on Health Combrinck-Graham has done an outstanding job of exploring family connections programs across the country. This highly readable book is a compendium of those programs and constitutes essential reading for all mental heal professionals...will also be useful to judges, child welfare workers, teachers and policy makers...Combrinck-Graham's perspective is positive, oriented to partnering and family strengths rather than problem-centered. If her goal is to involve her readers in a 'hands-on rather than a detached approach, she is successful. --Beth Bonham, MSN, RN, Indiana Juvenlie Justice Task Force, Readings, September 1996 .. .has pragmatic value to front-line workers and students as well as those higher in the hierarchy. While managing to effectively explain the big picture of system of care reform, Combrinck-Graham and her colleagues have succeeded in adding the depth and detail that have been missing. In doing so, they make a valuable contribution. Readers of this book will likely be inspired and informed. ...This book has something for almost everyone interested in system of care reform and improving the services available for children and families. -- David A. Dosser, Jr., PhD, LMFT, School of Human Environmental Sciences, East Carolina University.


At last, an exciting look at what programmatic interventions work to maintain or reunify families at risk as well as to further child-family connections when institutionalization, incarceration, or foster care exists. Children in Families at Risk is an inspiring book which engenders hope and confidence in the inherent competence of families and communities to work together against great odds. Administrators and clinicians who struggle to address the seemingly unsolvable concerns of fragmenting families will find here a remarkable combination of practical advice and clear conceptual thinking about treatment programs which effectively maintain family ties. --Marion Lindblad-Goldberg, Ph.D., Director, Family Therapy Training Center and Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine <br> Dr. Combrinck-Graham has done a magnificent job....She has created a work that offers a wide array of practical possibilities for address to this most vexing of social problems, the anti-social child and the troubled family, possibilities that inspire thinking and allow for the entry of hope. Her authors, 26 of them, each the innovator or the manager of a novel program, tell of a wide spectrum of efforts to apply the best in science and in clinical skill along with the most compassionate of ethical efforts toward the melioration of the personal, familial, and social distress arising from the troubled backgrounds of so many youngsters....The many pages of clinical description are in themselves an education for the practitioner. How to structure treatment for a fragmented and abusing family, how to deal with the multiple complex agency issues, how to address a highly disturbed family, what to emphasize first, what to say and what not to say, what to skirt at the outset so as to strengthen the family enough that it will be able eventually to face what it must, these and many other basic considerations are illustrat


At last, an exciting look at what programmatic interventions work to maintain or reunify families at risk as well as to further child-family connections when institutionalization, incarceration, or foster care exists. Children in Families at Risk is an inspiring book which engenders hope and confidence in the inherent competence of families and communities to work together against great odds. Administrators and clinicians who struggle to address the seemingly unsolvable concerns of fragmenting families will find here a remarkable combination of practical advice and clear conceptual thinking about treatment programs which effectively maintain family ties. --Marion Lindblad-Goldberg, Ph.D., Director, Family Therapy Training Center and Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine <br> Dr. Combrinck-Graham has done a magnificent job....She has created a work that offers a wide array of practical possibilities for


At last, an exciting look at what programmatic interventions work to maintain or reunify families at risk as well as to further child-family connections when institutionalization, incarceration, or foster care exists. Children in Families at Risk is an inspiring book which engenders hope and confidence in the inherent competence of families and communities to work together against great odds. Administrators and clinicians who struggle to address the seemingly unsolvable concerns of fragmenting families will find here a remarkable combination of practical advice and clear conceptual thinking about treatment programs which effectively maintain family ties. --Marion Lindblad-Goldberg, Ph.D., Director, Family Therapy Training Center and Associate Professor of Clinical Psychology, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine <br> Dr. Combrinck-Graham has done a magnificent job....She has created a work that offers a wide array of practical possibilities for address to this most vexing of social problems, the anti-social child and the troubled family, possibilities that inspire thinking and allow for the entry of hope. Her authors, 26 of them, each the innovator or the manager of a novel program, tell of a wide spectrum of efforts to apply the best in science and in clinical skill along with the most compassionate of ethical efforts toward the melioration of the personal, familial, and social distress arising from the troubled backgrounds of so many youngsters....The many pages of clinical description are in themselves an education for the practitioner. How to structure treatment for a fragmented and abusing family, how to deal with the multiple complex agencyissues, how to address a highly disturbed family, what to emphasize first, what to say and what not to say, what to skirt at the outset so as to strengthen the family enough that it will be able eventually to face what it must, these and many other basic considerations are illustrated through the rich servings of therapeutic exchange offered in many of the chapters....The richness and the variety of the attempts to find answers and the readiness to structure programs around things that work rather than doctrinaire ideas give this book its energy and its bounce. --Joseph D. Noshpitz, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, George Washington University, Washington, D.C. <br> Children in Families at Risk is a challenging state-of-the-art source book for practitioners, scholars, teachers, and policymakers. By assembling useful, candid reports from those in the field, the Editor has recognized that when families are under siege their children are at risk of being destroyed or blocked severely in their forward development. These reports describe the efforts of children and their parents to adapt, to survive, and to assert their needs; and they describe the painful, merciless costs to them, their families, their communities and to all our society. Each section and chapter of this book searches for and reports on the rich resources of all these children and their families, whose potential is being distorted and destroyed by a society that knows how to thwart but does not know how to preserve and prioritize its wealth of cultural, economic, and human resources. Each program, in its own way and with its own resources and limitations, attempts to maximize the healthy assets and recoverypotentials of the multigeneration, multiproblem families to which they relate themselves in respectful, inviting ways. We are indebted to Lee Combrinck-Graham for fascinating and challenging descriptions of the choices we make and the choices we could make. --Albert J. Solnit, M.D., Sterling Professor Emeritus, Pediatrics and Psychiatry, Senior Research Scientist and Commissioner, Department of Mental Health, State of Connecticut <br> There is a rumor abroad in the land that children with severe emotional, mental, or behavioral disorders are best treated in their families--even families in pain or under severe stress. It is a spontaneous discovery that is being made by professionals, providers, advocates from across the spectrum of child-serving agencies and programs--and by the families themselves! It is thought of as a paradigm shift in our thinking about troubled and troubling children. Lee Combrinck-Graham has orchestrated a remarkable set of essays that comprise both a handbook of creative and innovative practices in children's mental health, and an exposition of these profound changes by workers in the trenches' of our child-caring agencies. This is evidence from the front line that the paradigm has shifted! --Robert F. Cole, Ph.D., Director, National Resource Network for Child and Family Mental Health Services, Washington Business Group on Health <br> Combrinck-Graham has done an outstanding job of exploring family connections programs across the country. This highly readable book is a compendium of those programs and constitutes essential reading for all mental heal professionals...will also be useful to judges, child welfare workers, teachers and policymakers...Combrinck-Graham's perspective is positive, oriented to partnering and family strengths rather than problem-centered. If her goal is to involve her readers in a 'hands-on rather than a detached approach, she is successful. --Beth Bonham, MSN, RN, Indiana Juvenlie Justice Task Force, Readings, September 1996 <br>.,. has pragmatic value to front-line workers and students as well as those higher in the hierarchy. While managing to effectively explain the big picture of system of care reform, Combrinck-Graham and her colleagues have succeeded in adding the depth and detail that have been missing. In doing so, they make a valuable contribution. Readers of this book will likely be inspired and informed. ...This book has something for almost everyone interested in system of care reform and improving the services available for children and families. -- David A. Dosser, Jr., PhD, LMFT, School of Human Environmental Sciences, East Carolina University. <br>


Author Information

Lee Combrinck-Graham, M.D., is a child and adolescent psychiatrist. She is Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at the University of Illinois at Chicago. The editor of Children in Family Contexts, she is the author of numerous articles and book chapters on children, families, and the systems in which they live.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List