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In the past few years, there has been a major shift in the mental
health care of child and adolescents from inpatient care to
non-hospital community ambulatory settings. Economic pressures have
primarily driven this change in service delivery. Insurance
companies and managed care organizations have not only restricted
access to hospitalization and limited length of stays but
additionally have sharply reduced reimbursements for treatments.
State and federal policies for inpatient treatment and
reimbursement have followed similar trends. As a result, mental
health planners have attempted to develop programs to deal with
this trend of restricted inpatient care shifting treatment of
children and adolescents to home and community settings. Some of
these new programs are well planned and others are hastily planned
and implemented. The pitfall to this community approach is that
there is a population of chronically disturbed children and
adolescents, and highly stressed parents often lacking adequate
personal and family resource who may not respond to these new less
restrictive, less costly community approaches which potentially may
lead to an unsafe and dangerous situation for the child,
adolescent, family and the community. With this in mind, the
purpose of this book is to provide comprehensive and up-to-date
information regarding child and adolescent outpatient, day
treatment and community psychiatry. The emphasis of this book is to
provide practical knowledge through clinical case illustrations and
to explain various strategies in a detailed fashion.
Contents: Preface. Section 1. Ambulatory Services: Clinical, Administrative, and Training Issues. Administration of Ambulatory Services for Children and Adolescents: Historical View, Present Issues, Challenges, and Solutions. The Specialty Clinic: A Bridge Between Research and Clinical Practice. Child and Adolescent Services in a Community Mental Health Center: Transition, Organization, and Staffing Issues. Training in Ambulatory Settings. Section 2. Assessment. Psychiatric Assessment of Infants and Parent-Child Interaction. Psychiatric Evaluation of School Age Children. Psychiatric Assessment of Adolescents and their Families. The Process of Psychological Assessment. Speech and Language Evaluation. Forensic Community Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Section 3. Common Disorders of Childhood and Adolescence. Affective Disorders in Children and Adolescents. Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, Tics and Tourette's Syndrome and Separation Anxiety Disorder. Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder. Conduct and Oppositional Defiant Disorder. Alcohol and Substance Abuse in Children and Adolescents. Pervasive Developmental Disorders and Learning Disorders. Section 4. Therapeutic Interventions. Pharmacotherapy in Children and Adolescents. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy with Children and Adolescents. Individual Psychotherapy and Use of Play with Children. Individual Psychotherapy with Adolescents. Behavioral Interventions with Children and Adolescents. Group Psychotherapy with Children and Adolescents: Key Issues. 5. Day Treatment for Children and Adolescents. Day Hospital: Planning, Staffing and Administration. Therapeutic Milieu in a Day Hospital for Children and Adolescents. Day School for Emotionally and Behaviorally Disturbed, and Learning Disabled Children and Adolescents. 6. Other Community Based Programs. Mental health Services in Schools: Expanding Opportunities. Finding Our Way Home: Home and Community Based Care. Therapeutic Nursery. Foster Care.
First published in 1994. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
Barriers to community mental health centers (such as stigma, waiting lists) prevent youth from receiving necessary services. Providing Mental Health Services to Youth Where They Are identifies the reform that is needed in children's mental health service. As the issues of systems of mental health care have received increased attention, so has the recognition of the benefits of providing services to youth where they are: that is, in natural settings, such as home or school. Principles to include in systems of mental health care for youth are equally as important as actually reaching the youth: involvement of families, school staff, community leaders, and clergy. The development of programs are matched to the developmental, cultural and other needs of youth in a community so they mesh with existing services. This book describes how these principles play out in school-, home-, and community-based mental health programs for youth.
Related link: Free Email Alerting
First Published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
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