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OverviewWhen a family member is diagnosed with cancer or faces challenges from living with a disability, the impact reverberates throughout the family, leaving no one untouched. How should a clinician help the parents of a child who is critically ill? How can a marital relationship be skewed and a childs well-being compromised when a parent becomes permanently disabledand how can a clinician best intervene in such cases? In presenting his clinically powerful Family Systems Illness Model, John Rolland addresses these and other vital questions of importance to families in which there is a member with a major illness or disability. Rollands integrative treatment model is based on his experience with more than five hundred families, first as Founding Director of the Center for Illness in Families while at Yale University and currently at the University of Chicago. He applies it to a broad range of disorders that affect adults and children over the entire course of the life cycle. Richly illustrated with varied case examples, Families, Illness, and Disability is unique in describing this comprehensive model and in providing a highly practical guide to effective intervention. Through a normative, preventive lens, the books useful framework shows how the biopsychosocial demands of different illness and disabilities create particular strains on the family, how the stages of an illness affect the family, how family legacies of loss and illness shape their coping responses, and how family belief systems play a crucial role in the ability to manage health and illness. Practitioners will learn how to help families live well despite physical limitations and the uncertainties of threatened loss, how to encourage empowering rather than shame-based illness narratives, how to rewrite rigid caregiving scripts, how to encourage intimacy and maximize autonomy for all family members. With its superb integration of individual and family modalities, this outstanding book is ideal for all health and mental health professionals and students who work with illness, disability, and loss in a wide variety of clinical settings. Full Product DetailsAuthor: John S. RollandPublisher: Basic Books Imprint: Basic Books Dimensions: Width: 15.30cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.500kg ISBN: 9780465029150ISBN 10: 0465029159 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 09 June 1994 Audience: General/trade , Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Unknown Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of Contents* Foreword Donald A. Bloch * Introduction: In Search of a Family Psychosocial Map The Experience Of Illness And Disability * The Psychosocial Typology of Illness * The Time Phases of Illness The Family System Response * Overview of Family Dynamics with Chronic Disorders * Multigenerational Experiences with Illness, Loss, and Crisis * Chronic Disorders and the Life Cycle * Family Health and Illness Belief Systems * Anticipatory Loss in Physical Illness Assessment and Treatment Guidelines * Treatment Issues with Families * In Sickness and in Health: Helping Couples Master the Challenges * Personal and Larger System Interface Issues for CliniciansReviewsAuthor InformationJohn S. Rolland, M.D., is clinical associate professor of psychiatry and founding codirector of the Center for Family Health at the University of Chicago and its affiliate postgraduate and couples therapy training institute, the Chicago Center for Family Health. He is also a lecturer at Yale University School of Medicine. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |