ABSTRACT

Many parents at some time dread that a child of theirs may be mentally ill or disturbed. But even after a generation of child psychology, psychiatry and psychotherapy, they still frequently fear to admit their fears, and fear the mystery of the remedy as much as the mystery of the problem. It is therefore important that parents should come to easy terms with the work of the psychotherapist, and be reassured that it is based on sympathetic understanding, not mysteries. It was to explain themselves to parents and others who work with other young people that sixteen psychotherapists and analysts (mostly following the principles of Anna Freud or Melanie Klein and largely drawn from the Hampstead Child Therapy and the Tavistock clinics in London) decided to collaborate in the preparation of this book. In it they set out to describe their work in schools, hospitals, clinics, day centres, etc and to discuss their fundamental approach to the treatment of the disturbed child.

chapter One|16 pages

The Contribution of the Child Psychotherapist

Edited ByMary Boston

chapter Three|23 pages

The Child Guidance Clinic

chapter Four|16 pages

Child Psychotherapy in a Day Unit

Edited ByDilys Daws

chapter Six|14 pages

Working in a Hospital

chapter Seven|24 pages

Counselling Young People

chapter Eight|23 pages

A Study of an Elective Mute

chapter Nine|19 pages

Beginnings in Communication

Two Children in Psychotherapy

chapter Ten|30 pages

Play and Communication

chapter Eleven|19 pages

Psychotherapy with Psychotic Children

chapter Twelve|21 pages

Freud and Child Psychotherapy

chapter Thirteen|19 pages

Some Comments on Clinical Casework

chapter Fourteen|24 pages

The Tavistock Training and Philosophy