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Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy
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Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy

Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy

ByMaria Pozzi Monzo
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2007
eBook Published 1 May 2018
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9780429475955
Pages 272 pages
eBook ISBN 9780429900723
SubjectsBehavioral Sciences
KeywordsParent Infant Psychotherapy, Parent Child Relationships, Bick’s Method, Infant Observation, Health Visitor
Get Citation

Get Citation

Pozzi Monzo, M. (2007). Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429475955
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy has emerged from the authors' and contributors' excitement about the proliferation of parent-infant psychotherapy work around the world. This model of parent-infant work has increasingly been taking place in community settings, adapting to the needs of emotionally deprived people such as refugees and ethnically diverse groups. Skilled workers from a variety of disciplines have benefited from psychodynamic thinking and supervision without necessarily being formally trained psychoanalytically. Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy refers here to talented clinicians - such as speech and language therapists, health visitors, specialist nurses, child psychiatrists and paediatricians, family therapists, and psychologists, etc - not just child and adult psychotherapists and psychoanalysts. This book coincides with a global consciousness about the necessity to take care of the early years in order to create good outcomes for all young children, to reduce inequalities, and provide more cohesive and accessible early childhood services.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction
View abstract
chapter 1|14 pages
Looking at the symptoms as a starting point for understanding
ByPamela B. Sorensen
View abstract
chapter 2|20 pages
Echoes from overseas: Brazilian experiences in psychoanalytic observation, its developments, and therapeutic interventions with parents and small children
ByMarisa Pelella Mélega, Mariângela Mendes de Almeida
View abstract
chapter 3|19 pages
Multidisciplinary early intervention with infants and young children presenting emotional, physical, and speech difficulties
ByC. Bernasconi, D. Gilardoni, M.E. Pozzi, M.L. Terragni
View abstract
chapter 4|19 pages
Brief mother-father-infant psychodynamic psychotherapy: clinical and technical aspects
ByFrancisco Palacio-Espasa, Dora Knauer
View abstract
chapter 5|14 pages
The role of the infant in parent-child psychotherapies
ByA. Watillon-Naveau
View abstract
chapter 6|22 pages
Therapeutic consultation: early detection of “alarm symptoms” in infants and treatment with parent-infant psychotherapy
ByRomana Negri
View abstract
chapter 7|17 pages
Transformational process in parent-infant psychotherapy: provision in community drop-in groups
ByJudith Woodhead, Jessica James
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
Babies in groups: the creative roles of the babies, the mothers, and the therapists
ByCampbell Paul, Frances Thomson Salo
View abstract
chapter 9|23 pages
Parent-infant psychotherapy: when feelings of futility are prevalent
ByAmanda Jones
View abstract
chapter 10|19 pages
The health visitor’s role in promoting well being in families
ByMaggie Harris
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
“It wasn’t meant to happen like this”: the complexity of mourning great expectations
ByLynne Cudmore
View abstract
chapter 12|16 pages
Ten years of parent-infant psychotherapy in a township in South Africa. What have we learnt?
ByAstrid Berg
View abstract
chapter 13|15 pages
Innovation in parent-infant psychotherapy in Japan: the infant reveals family trauma
ByHisako Watanabe
View abstract

Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy has emerged from the authors' and contributors' excitement about the proliferation of parent-infant psychotherapy work around the world. This model of parent-infant work has increasingly been taking place in community settings, adapting to the needs of emotionally deprived people such as refugees and ethnically diverse groups. Skilled workers from a variety of disciplines have benefited from psychodynamic thinking and supervision without necessarily being formally trained psychoanalytically. Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy refers here to talented clinicians - such as speech and language therapists, health visitors, specialist nurses, child psychiatrists and paediatricians, family therapists, and psychologists, etc - not just child and adult psychotherapists and psychoanalysts. This book coincides with a global consciousness about the necessity to take care of the early years in order to create good outcomes for all young children, to reduce inequalities, and provide more cohesive and accessible early childhood services.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction
View abstract
chapter 1|14 pages
Looking at the symptoms as a starting point for understanding
ByPamela B. Sorensen
View abstract
chapter 2|20 pages
Echoes from overseas: Brazilian experiences in psychoanalytic observation, its developments, and therapeutic interventions with parents and small children
ByMarisa Pelella Mélega, Mariângela Mendes de Almeida
View abstract
chapter 3|19 pages
Multidisciplinary early intervention with infants and young children presenting emotional, physical, and speech difficulties
ByC. Bernasconi, D. Gilardoni, M.E. Pozzi, M.L. Terragni
View abstract
chapter 4|19 pages
Brief mother-father-infant psychodynamic psychotherapy: clinical and technical aspects
ByFrancisco Palacio-Espasa, Dora Knauer
View abstract
chapter 5|14 pages
The role of the infant in parent-child psychotherapies
ByA. Watillon-Naveau
View abstract
chapter 6|22 pages
Therapeutic consultation: early detection of “alarm symptoms” in infants and treatment with parent-infant psychotherapy
ByRomana Negri
View abstract
chapter 7|17 pages
Transformational process in parent-infant psychotherapy: provision in community drop-in groups
ByJudith Woodhead, Jessica James
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
Babies in groups: the creative roles of the babies, the mothers, and the therapists
ByCampbell Paul, Frances Thomson Salo
View abstract
chapter 9|23 pages
Parent-infant psychotherapy: when feelings of futility are prevalent
ByAmanda Jones
View abstract
chapter 10|19 pages
The health visitor’s role in promoting well being in families
ByMaggie Harris
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
“It wasn’t meant to happen like this”: the complexity of mourning great expectations
ByLynne Cudmore
View abstract
chapter 12|16 pages
Ten years of parent-infant psychotherapy in a township in South Africa. What have we learnt?
ByAstrid Berg
View abstract
chapter 13|15 pages
Innovation in parent-infant psychotherapy in Japan: the infant reveals family trauma
ByHisako Watanabe
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy has emerged from the authors' and contributors' excitement about the proliferation of parent-infant psychotherapy work around the world. This model of parent-infant work has increasingly been taking place in community settings, adapting to the needs of emotionally deprived people such as refugees and ethnically diverse groups. Skilled workers from a variety of disciplines have benefited from psychodynamic thinking and supervision without necessarily being formally trained psychoanalytically. Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy refers here to talented clinicians - such as speech and language therapists, health visitors, specialist nurses, child psychiatrists and paediatricians, family therapists, and psychologists, etc - not just child and adult psychotherapists and psychoanalysts. This book coincides with a global consciousness about the necessity to take care of the early years in order to create good outcomes for all young children, to reduce inequalities, and provide more cohesive and accessible early childhood services.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction
View abstract
chapter 1|14 pages
Looking at the symptoms as a starting point for understanding
ByPamela B. Sorensen
View abstract
chapter 2|20 pages
Echoes from overseas: Brazilian experiences in psychoanalytic observation, its developments, and therapeutic interventions with parents and small children
ByMarisa Pelella Mélega, Mariângela Mendes de Almeida
View abstract
chapter 3|19 pages
Multidisciplinary early intervention with infants and young children presenting emotional, physical, and speech difficulties
ByC. Bernasconi, D. Gilardoni, M.E. Pozzi, M.L. Terragni
View abstract
chapter 4|19 pages
Brief mother-father-infant psychodynamic psychotherapy: clinical and technical aspects
ByFrancisco Palacio-Espasa, Dora Knauer
View abstract
chapter 5|14 pages
The role of the infant in parent-child psychotherapies
ByA. Watillon-Naveau
View abstract
chapter 6|22 pages
Therapeutic consultation: early detection of “alarm symptoms” in infants and treatment with parent-infant psychotherapy
ByRomana Negri
View abstract
chapter 7|17 pages
Transformational process in parent-infant psychotherapy: provision in community drop-in groups
ByJudith Woodhead, Jessica James
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
Babies in groups: the creative roles of the babies, the mothers, and the therapists
ByCampbell Paul, Frances Thomson Salo
View abstract
chapter 9|23 pages
Parent-infant psychotherapy: when feelings of futility are prevalent
ByAmanda Jones
View abstract
chapter 10|19 pages
The health visitor’s role in promoting well being in families
ByMaggie Harris
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
“It wasn’t meant to happen like this”: the complexity of mourning great expectations
ByLynne Cudmore
View abstract
chapter 12|16 pages
Ten years of parent-infant psychotherapy in a township in South Africa. What have we learnt?
ByAstrid Berg
View abstract
chapter 13|15 pages
Innovation in parent-infant psychotherapy in Japan: the infant reveals family trauma
ByHisako Watanabe
View abstract

Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy has emerged from the authors' and contributors' excitement about the proliferation of parent-infant psychotherapy work around the world. This model of parent-infant work has increasingly been taking place in community settings, adapting to the needs of emotionally deprived people such as refugees and ethnically diverse groups. Skilled workers from a variety of disciplines have benefited from psychodynamic thinking and supervision without necessarily being formally trained psychoanalytically. Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy refers here to talented clinicians - such as speech and language therapists, health visitors, specialist nurses, child psychiatrists and paediatricians, family therapists, and psychologists, etc - not just child and adult psychotherapists and psychoanalysts. This book coincides with a global consciousness about the necessity to take care of the early years in order to create good outcomes for all young children, to reduce inequalities, and provide more cohesive and accessible early childhood services.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction
View abstract
chapter 1|14 pages
Looking at the symptoms as a starting point for understanding
ByPamela B. Sorensen
View abstract
chapter 2|20 pages
Echoes from overseas: Brazilian experiences in psychoanalytic observation, its developments, and therapeutic interventions with parents and small children
ByMarisa Pelella Mélega, Mariângela Mendes de Almeida
View abstract
chapter 3|19 pages
Multidisciplinary early intervention with infants and young children presenting emotional, physical, and speech difficulties
ByC. Bernasconi, D. Gilardoni, M.E. Pozzi, M.L. Terragni
View abstract
chapter 4|19 pages
Brief mother-father-infant psychodynamic psychotherapy: clinical and technical aspects
ByFrancisco Palacio-Espasa, Dora Knauer
View abstract
chapter 5|14 pages
The role of the infant in parent-child psychotherapies
ByA. Watillon-Naveau
View abstract
chapter 6|22 pages
Therapeutic consultation: early detection of “alarm symptoms” in infants and treatment with parent-infant psychotherapy
ByRomana Negri
View abstract
chapter 7|17 pages
Transformational process in parent-infant psychotherapy: provision in community drop-in groups
ByJudith Woodhead, Jessica James
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
Babies in groups: the creative roles of the babies, the mothers, and the therapists
ByCampbell Paul, Frances Thomson Salo
View abstract
chapter 9|23 pages
Parent-infant psychotherapy: when feelings of futility are prevalent
ByAmanda Jones
View abstract
chapter 10|19 pages
The health visitor’s role in promoting well being in families
ByMaggie Harris
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
“It wasn’t meant to happen like this”: the complexity of mourning great expectations
ByLynne Cudmore
View abstract
chapter 12|16 pages
Ten years of parent-infant psychotherapy in a township in South Africa. What have we learnt?
ByAstrid Berg
View abstract
chapter 13|15 pages
Innovation in parent-infant psychotherapy in Japan: the infant reveals family trauma
ByHisako Watanabe
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy has emerged from the authors' and contributors' excitement about the proliferation of parent-infant psychotherapy work around the world. This model of parent-infant work has increasingly been taking place in community settings, adapting to the needs of emotionally deprived people such as refugees and ethnically diverse groups. Skilled workers from a variety of disciplines have benefited from psychodynamic thinking and supervision without necessarily being formally trained psychoanalytically. Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy refers here to talented clinicians - such as speech and language therapists, health visitors, specialist nurses, child psychiatrists and paediatricians, family therapists, and psychologists, etc - not just child and adult psychotherapists and psychoanalysts. This book coincides with a global consciousness about the necessity to take care of the early years in order to create good outcomes for all young children, to reduce inequalities, and provide more cohesive and accessible early childhood services.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction
View abstract
chapter 1|14 pages
Looking at the symptoms as a starting point for understanding
ByPamela B. Sorensen
View abstract
chapter 2|20 pages
Echoes from overseas: Brazilian experiences in psychoanalytic observation, its developments, and therapeutic interventions with parents and small children
ByMarisa Pelella Mélega, Mariângela Mendes de Almeida
View abstract
chapter 3|19 pages
Multidisciplinary early intervention with infants and young children presenting emotional, physical, and speech difficulties
ByC. Bernasconi, D. Gilardoni, M.E. Pozzi, M.L. Terragni
View abstract
chapter 4|19 pages
Brief mother-father-infant psychodynamic psychotherapy: clinical and technical aspects
ByFrancisco Palacio-Espasa, Dora Knauer
View abstract
chapter 5|14 pages
The role of the infant in parent-child psychotherapies
ByA. Watillon-Naveau
View abstract
chapter 6|22 pages
Therapeutic consultation: early detection of “alarm symptoms” in infants and treatment with parent-infant psychotherapy
ByRomana Negri
View abstract
chapter 7|17 pages
Transformational process in parent-infant psychotherapy: provision in community drop-in groups
ByJudith Woodhead, Jessica James
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
Babies in groups: the creative roles of the babies, the mothers, and the therapists
ByCampbell Paul, Frances Thomson Salo
View abstract
chapter 9|23 pages
Parent-infant psychotherapy: when feelings of futility are prevalent
ByAmanda Jones
View abstract
chapter 10|19 pages
The health visitor’s role in promoting well being in families
ByMaggie Harris
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
“It wasn’t meant to happen like this”: the complexity of mourning great expectations
ByLynne Cudmore
View abstract
chapter 12|16 pages
Ten years of parent-infant psychotherapy in a township in South Africa. What have we learnt?
ByAstrid Berg
View abstract
chapter 13|15 pages
Innovation in parent-infant psychotherapy in Japan: the infant reveals family trauma
ByHisako Watanabe
View abstract

Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy has emerged from the authors' and contributors' excitement about the proliferation of parent-infant psychotherapy work around the world. This model of parent-infant work has increasingly been taking place in community settings, adapting to the needs of emotionally deprived people such as refugees and ethnically diverse groups. Skilled workers from a variety of disciplines have benefited from psychodynamic thinking and supervision without necessarily being formally trained psychoanalytically. Innovations in Parent-Infant Psychotherapy refers here to talented clinicians - such as speech and language therapists, health visitors, specialist nurses, child psychiatrists and paediatricians, family therapists, and psychologists, etc - not just child and adult psychotherapists and psychoanalysts. This book coincides with a global consciousness about the necessity to take care of the early years in order to create good outcomes for all young children, to reduce inequalities, and provide more cohesive and accessible early childhood services.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |8 pages
Introduction
View abstract
chapter 1|14 pages
Looking at the symptoms as a starting point for understanding
ByPamela B. Sorensen
View abstract
chapter 2|20 pages
Echoes from overseas: Brazilian experiences in psychoanalytic observation, its developments, and therapeutic interventions with parents and small children
ByMarisa Pelella Mélega, Mariângela Mendes de Almeida
View abstract
chapter 3|19 pages
Multidisciplinary early intervention with infants and young children presenting emotional, physical, and speech difficulties
ByC. Bernasconi, D. Gilardoni, M.E. Pozzi, M.L. Terragni
View abstract
chapter 4|19 pages
Brief mother-father-infant psychodynamic psychotherapy: clinical and technical aspects
ByFrancisco Palacio-Espasa, Dora Knauer
View abstract
chapter 5|14 pages
The role of the infant in parent-child psychotherapies
ByA. Watillon-Naveau
View abstract
chapter 6|22 pages
Therapeutic consultation: early detection of “alarm symptoms” in infants and treatment with parent-infant psychotherapy
ByRomana Negri
View abstract
chapter 7|17 pages
Transformational process in parent-infant psychotherapy: provision in community drop-in groups
ByJudith Woodhead, Jessica James
View abstract
chapter 8|20 pages
Babies in groups: the creative roles of the babies, the mothers, and the therapists
ByCampbell Paul, Frances Thomson Salo
View abstract
chapter 9|23 pages
Parent-infant psychotherapy: when feelings of futility are prevalent
ByAmanda Jones
View abstract
chapter 10|19 pages
The health visitor’s role in promoting well being in families
ByMaggie Harris
View abstract
chapter 11|19 pages
“It wasn’t meant to happen like this”: the complexity of mourning great expectations
ByLynne Cudmore
View abstract
chapter 12|16 pages
Ten years of parent-infant psychotherapy in a township in South Africa. What have we learnt?
ByAstrid Berg
View abstract
chapter 13|15 pages
Innovation in parent-infant psychotherapy in Japan: the infant reveals family trauma
ByHisako Watanabe
View abstract
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