Therapeutic residential care for children and youth : developing evidence-based international practice / / edited by James K. Whittaker, Jorge Fernandez del Valle and Lisa Holmes ; foreword by Robbie Gilligan |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, [England] ; ; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : , : Jessica Kingsley Publishers, , 2015 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (394 p.) |
Disciplina | 618.928914 |
Collana | Child Welfare Outcomes |
Soggetto topico |
Child psychotherapy - Residential treatment
Adolescent psychotherapy - Residential treatment Child mental health services Problem children - Institutional care |
ISBN |
1-84905-792-3
0-85700-833-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Therapeutic Residential CareFor Children and Youth: Developing Evidence-Based International Practice; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Introduction: The Current Landscape of Therapeutic Residential Care; Section 1: Pathways to Therapeutic Residential Care; 2. Making Sense of Differential Cross-National Placement Rates for Therapeutic Residential Care: Some Takeaway Messages for Policy; Table 2.1: Percentages and rates in residential care in a sample of 'developed' and 'transitional' economies (in some countries without child as unit of return data, these are estimates)
3. Needs and Characteristics of High-Resource Using Children and Youth: SpainTable 3.1: Child and family characteristics and differences; Table 3.2: Mental health characteristics ; Table 3.3: Cases in clinical range in CBCL; 4. Needs and Characteristics of High-Resource Using Youth: North America; Table 4.1: Child and Adolescent Needs and Strengths (CANS) ; FIGURE 4.1: Hinge analysis of outcome trajectories prior to and after initiation across the system of care in New Jersey Table 4.2: Outcomes on behavioral and emotional needs of 5248 youth over a residential treatment episode of care using items of the Child and Adolescent Needs and Strengths (CANS)Table 4.3: Action levels for need items from the Child and Adolescent Needs and Strengths (CANS); 5. Needs and Characteristics of High-Resource Using Children and Youth: Denmark; FIGURE 5.1: Share of all 0-17-year-old children in care and children in preventive programs, 1980-2010; Figure 5.2: Children in care, distributed at the five main care environments, 1982-2011 Figure 5.3: Children in care, distributed at the three main care environments by age, 2011Table 5.1: Factors related to the mothers of 15-year-old children in care; Table 5.2: Factors related to 15-year-old children in care; Table 5.3: Odds ratios on the probability of being in residential care; Section 2: Promising Program Models and Innovative Practices in Therapeutic Residential Care; 6. Varieties of Nordic Residential Care: A Way Forward for Institutionalized Therapeutic Interventions?; 7. MultifunC: Multifunctional Treatment in Residential and Community Settings 8. The Family Home Program: An Adaptation of the Teaching Family Model at Boys TownTable 8.1: Family Home Program model elements; Table 8.2: Family Home Program implementation components; 9. A New Era in the Development of Therapeutic Residential Care in the State of Victoria; FIGURE 9.1: Out-of-home care in Victoria - A five year plan; FIGURE 9.2: The Sanctuary model ; FIGURE 9.3: Framework for the Therapeutic Residential Care program (DHS-Verso, 2011); FIGURE 9.4: Lighthouse Foundation Therapeutic Family Model of CareTM ; 10. Evidence-Based Practices in Therapeutic Residential Care 11. Creating and Maintaining Family Partnerships in Residential Treatment Programs: Shared Decisions, Full Participation, Mutual Responsibility |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910791154203321 |
London, [England] ; ; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : , : Jessica Kingsley Publishers, , 2015 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Therapeutic residential care for children and youth : developing evidence-based international practice / / edited by James K. Whittaker, Jorge Fernandez del Valle and Lisa Holmes ; foreword by Robbie Gilligan |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | London, [England] ; ; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : , : Jessica Kingsley Publishers, , 2015 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (394 p.) |
Disciplina | 618.928914 |
Collana | Child Welfare Outcomes |
Soggetto topico |
Child psychotherapy - Residential treatment
Adolescent psychotherapy - Residential treatment Child mental health services Problem children - Institutional care |
ISBN |
1-84905-792-3
0-85700-833-1 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Therapeutic Residential CareFor Children and Youth: Developing Evidence-Based International Practice; Foreword; Acknowledgments; Introduction: The Current Landscape of Therapeutic Residential Care; Section 1: Pathways to Therapeutic Residential Care; 2. Making Sense of Differential Cross-National Placement Rates for Therapeutic Residential Care: Some Takeaway Messages for Policy; Table 2.1: Percentages and rates in residential care in a sample of 'developed' and 'transitional' economies (in some countries without child as unit of return data, these are estimates)
3. Needs and Characteristics of High-Resource Using Children and Youth: SpainTable 3.1: Child and family characteristics and differences; Table 3.2: Mental health characteristics ; Table 3.3: Cases in clinical range in CBCL; 4. Needs and Characteristics of High-Resource Using Youth: North America; Table 4.1: Child and Adolescent Needs and Strengths (CANS) ; FIGURE 4.1: Hinge analysis of outcome trajectories prior to and after initiation across the system of care in New Jersey Table 4.2: Outcomes on behavioral and emotional needs of 5248 youth over a residential treatment episode of care using items of the Child and Adolescent Needs and Strengths (CANS)Table 4.3: Action levels for need items from the Child and Adolescent Needs and Strengths (CANS); 5. Needs and Characteristics of High-Resource Using Children and Youth: Denmark; FIGURE 5.1: Share of all 0-17-year-old children in care and children in preventive programs, 1980-2010; Figure 5.2: Children in care, distributed at the five main care environments, 1982-2011 Figure 5.3: Children in care, distributed at the three main care environments by age, 2011Table 5.1: Factors related to the mothers of 15-year-old children in care; Table 5.2: Factors related to 15-year-old children in care; Table 5.3: Odds ratios on the probability of being in residential care; Section 2: Promising Program Models and Innovative Practices in Therapeutic Residential Care; 6. Varieties of Nordic Residential Care: A Way Forward for Institutionalized Therapeutic Interventions?; 7. MultifunC: Multifunctional Treatment in Residential and Community Settings 8. The Family Home Program: An Adaptation of the Teaching Family Model at Boys TownTable 8.1: Family Home Program model elements; Table 8.2: Family Home Program implementation components; 9. A New Era in the Development of Therapeutic Residential Care in the State of Victoria; FIGURE 9.1: Out-of-home care in Victoria - A five year plan; FIGURE 9.2: The Sanctuary model ; FIGURE 9.3: Framework for the Therapeutic Residential Care program (DHS-Verso, 2011); FIGURE 9.4: Lighthouse Foundation Therapeutic Family Model of CareTM ; 10. Evidence-Based Practices in Therapeutic Residential Care 11. Creating and Maintaining Family Partnerships in Residential Treatment Programs: Shared Decisions, Full Participation, Mutual Responsibility |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910810865503321 |
London, [England] ; ; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania : , : Jessica Kingsley Publishers, , 2015 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|