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Transforming Residential Interventions: Practical Strategies and
Future Directions captures the emerging changes, exciting
innovations, and creative policies and practices informing
ground-breaking residential programs. Building on the successful
2014 publication Residential Interventions for Children,
Adolescents, and Families, this follow-up volume provides a
contemporary framework to address the needs of young people and
their families, alongside practical strategies that can be
implemented at the program, community, system, and policy levels.
Using the Building Bridges Initiative as a foundation, the book
serves as a "how-to manual" for making bold changes to residential
interventions. The reader will learn from a range of inspired
leaders who, rather than riding the wave of change, jumped in and
created the wave by truly listening to and partnering with their
youth, families, advocates, and staff. Chapters provide real-time
practice examples and specific strategies that are transformational
and consider critical areas, such as family and youth voice, choice
and roles, partnerships, permanency and equity, diversity, and
inclusion. These methods benefit youth with behavioral and/or
emotional challenges and their families and will improve an
organization's long-term outcomes and fiscal bottom line. This book
is for oversight agencies, managed care companies, providers of
service, advocates, and youth/family leaders looking for an
exemplar guide to the new frontier of residential intervention. In
this era of accountability and measurement, it will become a
trusted companion in leading residential interventions to improved
practices and outcomes.
Transforming Residential Interventions: Practical Strategies and
Future Directions captures the emerging changes, exciting
innovations, and creative policies and practices informing
ground-breaking residential programs. Building on the successful
2014 publication Residential Interventions for Children,
Adolescents, and Families, this follow-up volume provides a
contemporary framework to address the needs of young people and
their families, alongside practical strategies that can be
implemented at the program, community, system, and policy levels.
Using the Building Bridges Initiative as a foundation, the book
serves as a "how-to manual" for making bold changes to residential
interventions. The reader will learn from a range of inspired
leaders who, rather than riding the wave of change, jumped in and
created the wave by truly listening to and partnering with their
youth, families, advocates, and staff. Chapters provide real-time
practice examples and specific strategies that are transformational
and consider critical areas, such as family and youth voice, choice
and roles, partnerships, permanency and equity, diversity, and
inclusion. These methods benefit youth with behavioral and/or
emotional challenges and their families and will improve an
organization's long-term outcomes and fiscal bottom line. This book
is for oversight agencies, managed care companies, providers of
service, advocates, and youth/family leaders looking for an
exemplar guide to the new frontier of residential intervention. In
this era of accountability and measurement, it will become a
trusted companion in leading residential interventions to improved
practices and outcomes.
Irrespective of theoretical orientation, families matter. Families
are the entity in which children are introduced to words, objects,
shapes, and colors. Families are the people related in a myriad of
conventional and unconventional ways that clothe, bathe, and feed
its biological and acquired offspring. Influenced by race,
ethnicity, income, and education, families relate not only to each
other within the unit but to others in the neighborhood, the
community, and beyond. This book is about families and their
children. This book is about those times when the family unit
experiences distress. This distress may be found in the serious
illness of a child or a parent. It may be the result of a
reconfiguration of the family as in divorce and remarriage. Or it
may involve the harming of a family member sexually or physically.
In this volume, the authors explore what family means today, what
functions it serves, and those circumstances that can make family
life painful. Importantly, the authors provide readers with clearly
written information drawn from the most recent scientific
investigations suggesting how the topics in this volume might be
addressed to either ease that discomfort (treatment) or prevent its
occurrence.
This handbook highlights present-day information and evidence-based
knowledge in the field of children's behavioral health to enable
practitioners, families, and others to choose and implement one of
many intervention approaches provided. Using a standardized format,
best practices for the prevention and treatment of many childhood
behavioral disorders are identified based on current research,
sound theory, and behavioral trial studies. This revision includes
an integration of the DSM-5 diagnostic manual and new chapters on
childhood psychosis and military families, and a thorough updating
of the research in the previous edition.
Now more than ever there is a need to ensure that best practices
are being used in residential programs. As the focus on costs and
outcomes increase, residential programs must clearly demonstrate
that the interventions provided are efficient and effective.
Readers will learn how to: Create strength-based, empowering and
healing environments; Better engage and partner with children,
adolescents and families, in meaningful ways; Support those who
have experienced trauma and loss, and to prevent and eliminate the
use of restraint and seclusion; Respect and include cultural
indices in practices; Train, mentor, supervise, support and empower
staff about how to deliver promising and best practices, and
evidence-informed and evidence-based interventions; and Track
long-term outcomes, and create funding strategies to better support
sustained positive outcomes. This book encourages readers to think
strategically about how agencies, communities and systems can
identify and implement actions that lead to positive change and how
to work more collaboratively to improve the lives of children and
adolescents who have experienced emotional and behavioral life
challenges and their families.
How do problem behaviors develop in adolescents? Why is teen crime
and suicide on the rise? Are there reliable ways to prevent or
treat these problems? A team of experts from research, clinical,
and medical settings finds answers to these questions while
exploring adolescent dysfunctional behavior. Divided into three
informative parts, this book provides in-depth coverage of topics
such as teen defiance and hostility, criminal misconduct, substance
abuse, depression, eating disorders, suicide, and mental illness.
Concluding with a thoughtful comparison of school-based,
home-based, and combined/coordinated treatment strategies,
Adolescent Dysfunctional Behavior succeeds in introducing its
audience to the many facets and treatments of adolescent problems.
Especially useful for researchers and students in developmental
psychology, psychology, family studies, sociology, education
research, social work, and public health. However, this accessible
book provides invaluable information for parents, foster parents,
group home facilitators, or anyone who works regularly with
adolescents.
Irrespective of theoretical orientation, families matter. Families
are the entity in which children are introduced to words, objects,
shapes, and colors. Families are the people related in a myriad of
conventional and unconventional ways that clothe, bathe, and feed
its biological and acquired offspring. Influenced by race,
ethnicity, income, and education, families relate not only to each
other within the unit but to others in the neighborhood, the
community, and beyond. This book is about families and their
children. This book is about those times when the family unit
experiences distress. This distress may be found in the serious
illness of a child or a parent. It may be the result of a
reconfiguration of the family as in divorce and remarriage. Or it
may involve the harming of a family member sexually or physically.
In this volume, the authors explore what family means today, what
functions it serves, and those circumstances that can make family
life painful. Importantly, the authors provide readers with clearly
written information drawn from the most recent scientific
investigations suggesting how the topics in this volume might be
addressed to either ease that discomfort (treatment) or prevent its
occurrence.
Now more than ever there is a need to ensure that best practices
are being used in residential programs. As the focus on costs and
outcomes increase, residential programs must clearly demonstrate
that the interventions provided are efficient and effective.
Readers will learn how to: Create strength-based, empowering and
healing environments; Better engage and partner with children,
adolescents and families, in meaningful ways; Support those who
have experienced trauma and loss, and to prevent and eliminate the
use of restraint and seclusion; Respect and include cultural
indices in practices; Train, mentor, supervise, support and empower
staff about how to deliver promising and best practices, and
evidence-informed and evidence-based interventions; and Track
long-term outcomes, and create funding strategies to better support
sustained positive outcomes. This book encourages readers to think
strategically about how agencies, communities and systems can
identify and implement actions that lead to positive change and how
to work more collaboratively to improve the lives of children and
adolescents who have experienced emotional and behavioral life
challenges and their families.
This handbook highlights present-day information and evidence-based
knowledge in the field of children's behavioral health to enable
practitioners, families, and others to choose and implement one of
many intervention approaches provided. Using a standardized format,
best practices for the prevention and treatment of many childhood
behavioral disorders are identified based on current research,
sound theory, and behavioral trial studies. This revision includes
an integration of the DSM-5 diagnostic manual and new chapters on
childhood psychosis and military families, and a thorough updating
of the research in the previous edition.
How do problem behaviors develop in adolescents? Why is teen crime
and suicide on the rise? Are there reliable ways to prevent or
treat these problems? A team of experts from research, clinical,
and medical settings finds answers to these questions while
exploring adolescent dysfunctional behavior. Divided into three
informative parts, this book provides in-depth coverage of topics
such as teen defiance and hostility, criminal misconduct, substance
abuse, depression, eating disorders, suicide, and mental illness.
Concluding with a thoughtful comparison of school-based,
home-based, and combined/coordinated treatment strategies,
Adolescent Dysfunctional Behavior succeeds in introducing its
audience to the many facets and treatments of adolescent problems.
Especially useful for researchers and students in developmental
psychology, psychology, family studies, sociology, education
research, social work, and public health. However, this accessible
book provides invaluable information for parents, foster parents,
group home facilitators, or anyone who works regularly with
adolescents.
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