Description |
1 online resource (xviii, 366 pages .) |
Contents |
Section I. Pregnancy and the Perinatal Period: Hope and Vicissitudes -- Normative Processes in Pregnancy and the Perinatal Period -- The Central Importance of Community: Protective and Risk Factors -- The Value of Psychotherapy Starting in Pregnancy -- Section II. Perinatal Child-Parent Psychotherapy -- Therapeutic Context: Basic Principles of CPP -- The Theory and Practice of P-CPP -- Implementing P-CPP -- Section III. Implementing P-CPP: Extended Clinical Cases -- Clinical Case 1. Learning to Become a Family: CPP with Parents Recovering from Substance -- Abuse and Violence -- Clinical Case 2. Healing Chronic Traumatic Stress: Treatment at the Intersection of Domestic -- Violence, Immigration, and Historical Trauma -- Clinical Case 3. Treating Incest Pregnancy in a Young Adolescent -- Clinical Case 4. Treating the Traumatic Sequelae of Perinatal Loss during a New Pregnancy -- Section IV. Common Obstacles to Attuned Caregiving -- Vignette 1. Infant Crying as a Trauma Reminder -- Vignette 2. Prematurity -- Vignette 3. When Older Children Stay Behind: Helping Prepare Absent Siblings for a New -- Baby's Arrival -- Vignette 4. Sequelae of Childhood Parental Separation during Pregnancy -- Vignette 5. Growing Up in Foster Care: Impact on Pregnancy and Motherhood -- Vignette 6. Rage in Pregnancy: Reenacting Childhood Exposure to Domestic Violence -- Vignette 7. Father-Daughter Incest: Its Long Shadow on Pregnancy and Motherhood -- Vignette 8. When the Mother's Mother Died in Childbirth: Pregnancy after a History of Maternal -- Loss -- Section V. Monitoring Fidelity: The "What" and "How" of P-CPP |
Summary |
"This state-of-the-art clinician's guide describes Perinatal Child-Parent Psychotherapy (P-CPP), a treatment for pregnant women and their partners whose readiness to nurture a baby is compromised by traumatic stress and adverse life experiences. An application to pregnancy of the widely disseminated, evidence-based Child-Parent Psychotherapy, P-CPP spans the prenatal period through the first 6 months of life. Extended cases illustrate ways to help mothers and fathers understand how trauma has affected them, navigate the physical and emotional challenges of becoming parents, build essential caregiving competencies, and ensure the safety of their babies and themselves. Cultural considerations in working with diverse families are addressed through specific intervention examples. Key words/subject areas: parent-infant psychotherapy, psychotherapy with pregnant women, at-risk mothers and infants, perinatal mental health, P-CPP, early intervention, treatment manuals, parenting interventions, infant mental health, Don't Hit My Mommy, child abuse, early childhood, incest survivors, family violence, prevention, parenting programs, maltreatment, evidence-based, attachment-based Audience: Clinical psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, counselors, and nurses; researchers in the areas of perinatal and infant mental health"-- Provided by publisher |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Parent-child interaction therapy.
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Parent-infant psychotherapy.
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Perinatology -- Psychological aspects
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Psychic trauma -- Treatment
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Parent and child.
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Family Therapy -- methods
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Parent-Child Relations
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Parent-child interaction therapy
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Parent-infant psychotherapy
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Psychic trauma -- Treatment
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Diaz, Manuela A., author
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Castro, Gloria (Clinical psychologist), author.
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Oliver Bucio, Griselda, author
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ISBN |
9781462543502 |
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1462543502 |
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