Results 241 to 250 of about 341,451 (299)
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British Journal of Therapy and Rehabilitation, 1995
Since the Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons Act 1970, occupational therapists have become the major initiators and coordinators of adaptations to the homes of people with disabilities. This article uses a case study to illustrate the often complex and lengthy processes involved in ensuring a satisfactory outcome for the client and his/her family ...
Glynis Hill, Jane Kimble
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Since the Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons Act 1970, occupational therapists have become the major initiators and coordinators of adaptations to the homes of people with disabilities. This article uses a case study to illustrate the often complex and lengthy processes involved in ensuring a satisfactory outcome for the client and his/her family ...
Glynis Hill, Jane Kimble
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Family‐directed cognitive adaptation for schizophrenia
Journal of Clinical Psychology, 2009AbstractCognitive impairment is pervasive in schizophrenia and is a major cause of poor functioning and caregiver burden. However, there are few treatments specifically aimed at helping families cope with a relative's cognitive difficulties and reducing the effects of cognitive impairments on the client's daily functioning.
Michelle S, Friedman-Yakoobian +4 more
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1995
Families face a myriad of adverse changes in role functioning, financial status, and expectations for their future following traumatic brain injury (TBI) to a family member. The impact of these changes is frequently depression, anxiety, anger, and guilt (Lezak, 1978; Livingston et al., 1985a,b; Shaw & McMahon, 1990), with some research going so far as ...
Louise Margaret Smith +1 more
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Families face a myriad of adverse changes in role functioning, financial status, and expectations for their future following traumatic brain injury (TBI) to a family member. The impact of these changes is frequently depression, anxiety, anger, and guilt (Lezak, 1978; Livingston et al., 1985a,b; Shaw & McMahon, 1990), with some research going so far as ...
Louise Margaret Smith +1 more
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Celiac Disease: Helping Families Adapt
Gastroenterology Nursing, 1997Lifelong dietary compliance prevents the long-term effects associated with celiac disease. However, this simple solution, diet, has many long-reaching effects on the children affected with celiac disease and their families. Assisting families in coping with this chronic illness is necessary for children and families to develop a sense of control.
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The mental hospital and family adaptations
The Psychiatric Quarterly, 1962The mental hospital directs its explicit diagnostic and treatment efforts to the pathology of the patient. Simultaneously, if less deliberately, the hospital contributes to reorganization of the pattern of relationships previously esta~blished between the patient and his intimates.
H, SAMPSON, S L, MESSINGER, R D, TOWNE
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Adapting Family Therapy to Multideficit Families
Social Casework, 1970Parents and children who have been emotionally deprived learn to adapt and mature in treatment emphasizing communication and interdependence within the family
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The family's adaptation to childhood leukemia
Social Science & Medicine, 1987This baseline study obtained data measuring the specific effects of the stress of childhood leukemia on family life and on the lives of individual family members. Mothers, fathers, siblings, and patients were included in the data collection. Specific variables measured were marital adjustment, anxiety level, dynamics of family interaction, and the ...
B, Fife, J, Norton, G, Groom
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Adaptation and resiliency in Swedish families
Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences, 2007A longitudinal research project began in 1993 of Norwegian, Swedish and American mothers’ perception of her family's dynamics and adaptation during childbearing and childrearing. Results indicated that Swedish mothers adapted better than other mothers. In 2003, a mixed design study was conducted with original Swedish mothers that aimed to describe the ...
Ermalynn M, Kiehl +2 more
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Family Ritual Facilitates Adaptation to Parenthood
Public Health Nursing, 1998ABSTRACT An ethnographic study done in Hidalgo County. Texas, among 25 Mexican American first‐time mothers and fathers documented the presence of an intergenerational family ritual that facilitated adaptation to parenthood in 24 of the 25 families. La cuarentena is a family ritual of 40 days duration postbirth with cultural prescriptions for maternal ...
K, Niska, M, Snyder, B, Lia-Hoagberg
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American Journal of Sociology, 1935
The economic crisis has emphasized the significance of the family as a social unit even in modern life. The effects of the depression on the individual families are largely determined by the fundamental characteristic of each family prior to its economic collapse.
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The economic crisis has emphasized the significance of the family as a social unit even in modern life. The effects of the depression on the individual families are largely determined by the fundamental characteristic of each family prior to its economic collapse.
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