Results 291 to 300 of about 2,467,323 (353)

Families and Family Therapy

Family Process, 1975
ipated at the community level. The major question left untouched is the barrier to national implementation of a policy with liberal roots in a nation uncertain about its commitment to liberalism. The report of the Committee on Children of Minority Groups identifies racism as the number one public health problem in America.
Kitty La Perriere, Nathan W. Ackerman
  +4 more sources

Multiple Family Therapy

Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 1974
The development of a multiple family therapy programme in a general hospital department of psychological medicine is described. The use of one way vision screens in such therapy, varying according to the patients' and families' needs is an important technological aid.
J, Lindsay, D, Pollard
openaire   +2 more sources

Cognitive Family Therapy

Journal of Sex & Marital Therapy, 1980
Cognitive family therapy is a new short-term psychotherapy which facilitates self-disclosure. The paper defines self-disclosure and differentiates cognitive self-disclosure from self-exposure and emotional self-disclosure. The relationship of cognitive self-disclosure in facilitating marital intimacy is developed.
E M, Waring, L, Russell
openaire   +2 more sources

Child‐Focused Family Therapy: Behavioural Family Therapy Versus Brief Family Therapy

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy, 1999
We examined the effectiveness of behavioural family therapy (following the treatment agenda outlined in Fleischman, Horne and Arthur, 1983) and brief family therapy (following the procedures outlined in Fisch, Weakland and Segal, 1985), in the treatment of child psychological disorders.
William Smith   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Family therapy

2005
Abstract The term ‘family therapy’ covers a variety of approaches. At one extreme it is a method drawn from one or more of a range of theoretically based schools that seeks to help an individual patient who presents with a clinical syndrome.
Sidney Bloch, Edwin Harari
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Family therapy with ‘invisible families’

British Journal of Medical Psychology, 1995
This paper describes a therapeutic model for working with children in the care system who have severe behavioural problems. The model is an extension of consultation work and was developed from clinical material. It links some of the theories about the internal conflicts of children to their family history and ways of consulting with the professional ...
J, Hay, R, Leheup, M, Almudevar
openaire   +2 more sources

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