What the family brings: Gathering evidence for strengths-based work


Autoria(s): Allison, S; Stacey, K; Dadds, V; Roeger, L; Wood, A; Martin, G
Contribuinte(s)

Ivan Eisler

Data(s)

01/08/2003

Resumo

Families attending child and adolescent mental health (CAMH) services are often assumed to have problems in key areas such as communication, belonging/acceptance and problem-solving. Family therapy is often directed towards addressing these difficulties. With increasing emphasis in family therapy and human services fields over the last decade on identifying and building from strengths, a different starting point has been advocated. This paper describes a large survey of the self-reported pre-therapy functioning of children and families using a public CAMH service (n = 416). Before commencing family therapy parents identified family strengths across a range of key areas, despite the burden of caring for children with moderate to severe mental health problems. This evidence supports theoretical and clinical work that advocates a strengths perspective, and highlights how resilience framed in family (and social) rather than individual terms enables a greater appreciation of how strengths may be harnessed in therapeutic work.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:67192

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwell

Palavras-Chave #Psychology, Clinical #Family studies #Assessment device #Resilience #Children #Adolescents #Perspective #Therapy #C1 #321021 Psychiatry #730211 Mental health #1103 Clinical Sciences
Tipo

Journal Article