ABSTRACT

This book is designed as a treatment manual for using family-based treatments with children struggling with mental illness, supporting both family therapists and the families they are helping.

Based on over 40 years of research, it has been shown that involving the entire family in treatment is effective. However, family therapy is still not used as a first line of treatment. Paul Sunseri explains and explores why family-based approaches should be used with struggling young people and how this can be applied in practice. Chapters discuss the causes, contributors, and social determinants for the rise in childhood mental illness and provide empirical evidence and treatments for working with children and adolescents suffering from self-harm, suicidal ideation, anxiety, anger, and depression. Filled with case studies throughout, the book also touches on mitigating the effects of screen time in our increasingly technological lives and interventions to help reluctant children participate in therapy. This book will be invaluable reading for graduate-level students, clinicians in training, and fully licensed clinicians, such as psychologists, psychiatrists, marriage and family therapists, and clinical social workers.

The book is also a practical resource for parents and other caregivers; it pulls back the curtain on therapy and teaches parents exactly what to do to best love and support their child at a time when they need it the most.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|88 pages

What In the World Is Going On and Where Does Change Begin?

chapter 3|17 pages

Righting the Ship

Getting Families Back on Course

chapter 4|17 pages

The Case for Family-Focused Treatment

chapter 5|19 pages

Intensive Family-Focused Therapy (IFFT)

part II|69 pages

Treating Suicide and Self-Harm

chapter 6|10 pages

Suicide and Self-Harm

Prevalence, Evidence-Based Treatments, and the Role of Family and Situations

chapter 8|18 pages

Case Example of Treating Self-Harm

The Girl Who Wouldn't Stop Hurting Herself

part III|52 pages

Treating Social Isolation and Anxious Avoidance

chapter 9|20 pages

Anxious Avoidance

Prevalence, Evidence-Based Treatments, and the Role of Family and Situations

chapter 11|17 pages

Case Example of Treating Anxious Avoidance

The Boy Who Disappeared

part IV|22 pages

Directions for the Future