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How Many More Questions? provides readers with a comprehensive framework to understand how 5-10 year old children use language to formulate and communicate their thoughts. The book guides the reader in how to effectively elicit information about sensitive and stressful topics from young children, such as their emotions, difficulties, problems, worries, and illness. Expertly written chapters include twelve developmental guidelines, techniques, case examples,and illustrative dialogues to provide the reader with the tools needed to address specific communication challenges involved in speaking…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
How Many More Questions? provides readers with a comprehensive framework to understand how 5-10 year old children use language to formulate and communicate their thoughts. The book guides the reader in how to effectively elicit information about sensitive and stressful topics from young children, such as their emotions, difficulties, problems, worries, and illness. Expertly written chapters include twelve developmental guidelines, techniques, case examples,and illustrative dialogues to provide the reader with the tools needed to address specific communication challenges involved in speaking with young children who have pain, medical trauma, terminal illness, or specific disorders.
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Autorenporträt
Rochelle Caplan, MD, is Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry in the UCLA Department of Psychiatry and Directed the UCLA Pediatric Neuropsychiatry clinical program for twenty years. She completed her medical studies at the Jerusalem University Hadassah Medical School and her training in adult and child psychiatry at the Tel-Aviv University Sackler Medical School. Dr. Caplan is a pediatric neuropsychiatrist with clinical and research expertise in how children use language to formulate their thoughts and present them to the listener. She has devoted her clinical career to the evaluation and treatment of children with severe behavior/emotional problems due to psychiatric and neurological disorders. Her research has used psycholinguistic, behavior/emotions, and brain imaging measures to study abnormalities in the development of communication skills, behavior/emotions, and brain in children with psychiatric and neurological disorders. Brenda Bursch, PhD, is a medical psychologist with clinical and research interests in pediatric pain, palliative care, somatization, and illness falsification. She received her PhD from Claremont Graduate School in 1990 and is a Professor in the Departments of Psychiatry & Biobehavioral Sciences and Pediatrics at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, where she has been on faculty since 1994. She is the Clinical Director of the Pediatric Psychiatry Consultation Liaison service, overseeing child psychiatry consultations for pediatric medical inpatients. She has presented lectures at professional conferences within the United States and abroad, and has published numerous scientific articles and book chapters.