Search results for "Family therapy"

showing 10 items of 47 documents

Using the Intervention Mapping protocol to develop a family-based intervention for improving lifestyle habits among overweight and obese children: st…

2016

Abstract Background In light of the high prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity, there is a need of developing effective prevention programs to address the rising prevalence and the concomitant health consequences. The main aim of the present study is to systematically develop and implement a tailored family-based intervention for improving lifestyle habits among overweight and obese children, aged 6–10 years old, enhancing parental self-efficacy, family engagement and parent-child interaction. A subsidiary aim of the intervention study is to reduce the prevalence of overweight and obesity among those participating in the intervention study. Methods/design The Intervention Mapping p…

0301 basic medicineGerontologyCounselingParentsmedicine.medical_specialtyPediatric ObesityPilot ProjectsHealth PromotionOverweightChildhood obesity03 medical and health sciencesIntervention mappingStudy Protocol0302 clinical medicineIntervention (counseling)Health caremedicineHumansParental involvement030212 general & internal medicineChildhood obesityParent-Child RelationsChildExerciseLife Style030109 nutrition & dieteticsEnergy balance related behaviorbusiness.industryNorwayPublic healthlcsh:Public aspects of medicinePublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthlcsh:RA1-1270Feeding Behaviormedicine.diseaseFamily lifeIntervention Mapping protocolResearch DesignChild PreschoolPhysical therapyFamily TherapyFemaleBiostatisticsmedicine.symptombusinessBMC Public Health
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Efficacy and effectiveness of individual family intervention on social and clinical functioning and family burden in severe schizophrenia: a 2-year r…

2009

BackgroundEmpirical evidence of the efficacy and effectiveness of psychosocial family intervention and of the specificity of its effects on the course of schizophrenia is limited. The aim was to study the efficacy and effectiveness of psychosocial family intervention with regard to clinical and social functioning and family burden after controlling for compliance and several prognostic factors.MethodA 2-year randomized controlled trial with blind assessments. Fifty patients with DSM-IV schizophrenia and persistent positive symptoms and/or previous clinical relapse were allocated to psychosocial family intervention, individual counselling and standard treatment versus individual counselling …

AdultMaleFamily therapymedicine.medical_specialtylaw.inventionYoung AdultCost of IllnessRandomized controlled triallawIntervention (counseling)Secondary PreventionmedicineHumansSchizophreniform disorderPsychiatryApplied PsychologyPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesStandard treatmentSocial environmentmedicine.diseaseCombined Modality TherapyPsychotherapyPsychiatry and Mental healthTreatment OutcomeCaregiversPsychotic DisordersSpainSchizophreniaSchizophreniaPatient ComplianceFamily TherapyFemaleSchizophrenic PsychologyPsychologySocial AdjustmentPsychosocialAntipsychotic AgentsPsychological Medicine
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Does intensive multimodal treatment for maternal ADHD improve the efficacy of parent training for children with ADHD? A randomized controlled multice…

2015

Background This is the first randomized controlled multicenter trial to evaluate the effect of two treatments of maternal attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) on response to parent–child training targeting children's external psychopathology. Methods Mother–child dyads (n = 144; ADHD according to DSM-IV; children: 73.5% males, mean age 9.4 years) from five specialized university outpatient units in Germany were centrally randomized to multimodal maternal ADHD treatment [group psychotherapy plus open methylphenidate medication; treatment group (TG): n = 77] or to clinical management [supportive counseling without psychotherapy or psychopharmacotherapy; control group (CG): n = 67].…

AdultMalePediatricsmedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentMothersChild Behavior DisordersGroup psychotherapyMaintenance therapyMulticenter trialOutcome Assessment Health CareDevelopmental and Educational PsychologymedicineHumansChildAdverse effectMethylphenidateMiddle AgedCombined Modality TherapyConfidence intervalPsychiatry and Mental healthAttention Deficit Disorder with HyperactivityPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthMethylphenidatePsychotherapy GroupParent trainingCentral Nervous System StimulantsFamily TherapyFemalePsychologyPsychopathologymedicine.drugClinical psychologyJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
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Do all people with schizophrenia receive the same benefit from different family intervention programs?

2005

The study evaluated baseline characteristics that could be used to predict the outcome of family intervention in schizophrenia and focussed on identifying the subgroups of patients who were more likely to respond to one therapeutic modality than another. We conducted a controlled trial in which participants were assigned at random to either a Behavioral Family Intervention Group or a Relatives' Group. Patients in one catchment area, having suffered one psychotic relapse within the previous year and living with their families, were assessed by an independent evaluator at baseline and 12 months later. Some clinical and family factors such as the duration of illness, number of hospital admissi…

AdultMalePsychosismedicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentIntervention grouplaw.inventionRandomized controlled trialBehavior TherapyRecurrencelawIntervention (counseling)medicinePsychoeducationHumansPsychiatryBiological PsychiatryDemographyPsychological distressmedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthSchizophreniaBaseline characteristicsSchizophreniaFamily TherapyFemalePsychologyClinical psychologyPsychiatry Research
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Communication Deviances and Clarity Among the Mothers of Normally Achieving and Learning-Disabled Boys.

1994

The main purpose of the study was to reexamine the association between maternal communication deviances and learning disabilities in children. In this study, we adapted and extended the procedure used by Ditton, Green, and Singer (1987). A two-part experimental task was used: one in which the child could not request any clarification of mother's instructions, and another in which the mother and child could communicate. Both communication deviances and the clarity of mothers' communication were analyzed. The subjects were 60 mother-child pairs in which half of the children had learning disabilities and the other half were normally achieving children matched for age and parents' SES. The dyad…

AdultMaleSocial PsychologyTask (project management)law.inventionDevelopmental psychologylawCommunication disordermedicineHumansAttentionChildAssociation (psychology)Problem SolvingParentingLearning DisabilitiesVerbal BehaviorCommunicationmedicine.diseaseMother-Child RelationsSocial relationClinical PsychologyEl NiñoLearning disabilityCLARITYEducational StatusFamily TherapyFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyLearning disabledSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Family Process
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Children of parents with cancer: a collaborative project between a child psychiatry clinic and an adult oncology clinic.

2007

This article describes the development of a collaborative relationship between a child psychiatry clinic and an adult oncology clinic within a university hospital. The interest of the child psychiatry clinic was to pay attention to children of parents with cancer, and to propose an intervention to support them. A child-centred family counselling model was designed for this purpose. The preparation, implementation, and results of this project are described. Positive results, as well as mistakes and failures are discussed, and recommendations are made regarding this kind of collaboration.

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentOncology clinicInterprofessional RelationsPsychiatric Department Hospital03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineChild of Impaired ParentsIntervention (counseling)NeoplasmsOncology Service HospitalmedicineChild and adolescent psychiatryHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesCooperative BehaviorPsychiatryChildFinlandbusiness.industry05 social sciencesHealth Plan ImplementationCancerGeneral MedicineUniversity hospitalmedicine.disease030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyFamily medicineChild PreschoolModels OrganizationalPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFamily TherapyFemaleInterdisciplinary Communicationbusiness050104 developmental & child psychologyClinical child psychology and psychiatry
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The self-narrative and acute psychosis

1995

The aim of this study was to apply the narrative approach in analyzing family therapy meetings in cases of acute psychosis. The self-narrative is essential in acute psychosis since it is either collapsed or not coherent enough. The results indicate that it is important to create concrete practices that produce stories concerning the patient in relation to others. The self-narrative must be re-authored by the patient even though it is socially constructed. This is achieved by creating multiple perspectives of self-narratives in so-called therapy meetings with the patient, family members, and staff members representing different professionals.

Cultural StudiesFamily therapyPsychosisPsychotherapistSocial PsychologySocial workSelfmedia_common.quotation_subjectmedicine.diseaseSocial constructionismClinical PsychologyPersonal identitymedicinePersonalityNarrativePsychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)media_commonContemporary Family Therapy
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Conversations on contexts and meanings: On understanding therapeutic change from a contextual viewpoint

1990

Recent developments within family therapy theory, often referred to as the Post-Milan Movement, have once again stressed the therapeutic encounter'squality of conversation. When therapy is looked upon as conversation, attention is not only paid to the fact that most of what happens in a session is talking. Rather, a more fundamental stance towardshuman life as basically meaning- making is taken. This is one of the essential premises of the contextualist approach to the social sciences. When applied to human problems this approach claims that “symptoms” evolve when (1) a person gives meaning to and performs a social act within a context inappropriate to the socially shared meaning of that ac…

Cultural StudiesFamily therapySocial PsychologySocial workmedia_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)Session (web analytics)EpistemologyClinical PsychologyConversationMeaning (existential)PsychologySocial psychologySocial Sciences (miscellaneous)media_commonContemporary Family Therapy
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Whose Life is it Anyway? Exploring the Social Relations of High-Conflict Divorce Cases in Southern Norway

2021

AbstractThe paper reports on findings from an empirical study based on qualitative interviews with Norwegian parents identified as part of a high-conflict divorce situation and interviews with caseworkers from a child welfare service. The site of study is an institutional circuit of concern, assessment, and referral involving the court, child welfare services, and a public family therapy service. The paper draws on the social ontology and analytic concepts of institutional ethnography and adopts parents’ standpoint to explore how their knowledge and experience are shaped through encounters with professionals in the process of being identified and assessed as a high-conflict divorce case. Th…

Cultural StudiesService (business)Family therapySocial PsychologySocial workReferralbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesVDP::Medisinske Fag: 700::Klinisk medisinske fag: 750Public relationsSocial relationClinical PsychologyEmpirical research050902 family studiesEthnography0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSociology0509 other social sciencesbusinessWelfareSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)050104 developmental & child psychologymedia_commonContemporary Family Therapy
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Early Response to treatment in Eating Disorders: A Systematic Review and a Diagnostic Test Accuracy Meta-Analysis

2016

Objective Early response to eating disorders treatment is thought to predict a later favourable outcome. A systematic review of the literature and meta-analyses examined the robustness of this concept. Method The criteria used across studies to define early response were summarised following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. Diagnostic Test Accuracy methodology was used to estimate the size of the effect. Results Findings from 24 studies were synthesized and data from 14 studies were included in the meta-analysis. In Anorexia Nervosa, the odds ratio of early response predicting remission was 4.85(95%CI: 2.94–8.01) and the summary Area Under t…

Family therapy050103 clinical psychologymedicine.medical_specialtyBulimia nervosa05 social sciencesArea under the curveOdds ratiomedicine.disease030227 psychiatry03 medical and health sciencesPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyEating disorders0302 clinical medicineSystematic reviewBinge-eating disorderMeta-analysismental disordersmedicine0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychiatryPsychologyClinical psychologyEuropean Eating Disorders Review
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