Treating Trauma: Relationship-Based Psychotherapy with Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults

Treating Trauma: Relationship-Based Psychotherapy with Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults

Treating Trauma: Relationship-Based Psychotherapy with Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults

Treating Trauma: Relationship-Based Psychotherapy with Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults

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Overview

Clinicians working with traumatized youth face many challenges in supporting growth and development while addressing the many negative consequences of abuse and neglect. When working with youth in foster care, additional obstacles must be overcome: changing placements, overwhelmed substitute caregivers, caseworker turnover, complication with birth siblings and family, and communication difficulties with and within the child welfare system.

Treating Trauma: Relationship-Based Psychotherapy with Children, Adolescents, and Young Adults presents a theoretically based and empirically supported framework for work with traumatized children, youth, and young adults who have spent time in foster care. It offers vivid examples of cases from the work of clinicians of A Home Within, a national non-profit focused on meeting the emotional needs of current and former foster youth. These nine case studies illustrate the vital role that relationships play in helping overcome the trauma of chronic, unexpected, and unexplained losses. They describe the work with clients, the collateral work, and also the therapists’ personal experiences of treating this vulnerable population.

This work also explores the impact of secondary trauma on those working in an around the foster care system and addresses ways that therapists and others vulnerable to vicarious trauma can protect themselves, as well as their clients. In particular, three chapters examine the power of peer consultation in sustaining therapeutic work with vulnerable and traumatized populations.

Methods of integrating evidence-based approaches into treatment of youth with multiple mental health problems and unavailable parents are discussed and explored. Essential elements of effective mental health interventions with traumatized foster youth are presented and illustrated.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780765709837
Publisher: Aronson, Jason Inc.
Publication date: 08/15/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 222
File size: 856 KB

About the Author

Toni V. Heineman, DMH, is executive director and founder of A Home Within.
Dr. Heineman is a clinical psychologist who has been in private practice treating children, adults, and families in the San Francisco Bay Area for over thirty years.

June M. Clausen is chair and professor of psychology at the University of San Francisco. Dr. Clausen directs the Foster Care Research Group, and maintains a clinical practice in San Jose, California.

Saralyn C. Ruff oversees the Fostering Relationships Program of A Home Within, dedicated to improving mental health services for foster youth. Dr. Ruff also teaches in the psychology department at the University of San Francisco and is a practicing clinician in San Francisco, California.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction: The Need for a Relationships Framework in
Effective Trauma Treatment for Children and Youth

PART 1: Holding the Hope: Establishing Relationship with Multiply
Traumatized, Psychiatrically Complex Patients

CHAPTER 1: Molly
CHAPTER 2: Juan
CHAPTER 3: Lilly
CHAPTER 4: Joining a Consultation Group

PART 2: The Heart and Soul of Psychotherapy: Unique Challenges in
Treatment of Foster Youth

CHAPTER 5: Lucy
CHAPTER 6: Michael
CHAPTER 7: Isaiah
CHAPTER 8: An Experience in a Long-Term Consultation
Group

PART 3: Shared Memories: The Nature and Impact of Long-Term
Trauma Treatment

CHAPTER 9: Clemee
CHAPTER 10: Zina
CHAPTER 11: Ben
CHAPTER 12: How Consultation Groups Change Therapy
(and Therapists)
CHAPTER 13: Conclusion: Eight Elements of Relationship-Based
Therapy

Index

About the Contributors





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