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Parents get sick. Their lives change radically, and quickly. This book offers immediate, practical and experienced advice for adult family members and others responsible for the wellbeing of children when one parent has a serious illness. The authors are both clinical social workers with years of training and time spent with children and families in crisis. They establish a clear and authoritative voice, while keeping a tone of encouragement throughout. With its matter-of-fact language, the book is organized to make it easy for parents to turn to the sections they most need, when they need…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Parents get sick. Their lives change radically, and quickly. This book offers immediate, practical and experienced advice for adult family members and others responsible for the wellbeing of children when one parent has a serious illness. The authors are both clinical social workers with years of training and time spent with children and families in crisis. They establish a clear and authoritative voice, while keeping a tone of encouragement throughout. With its matter-of-fact language, the book is organized to make it easy for parents to turn to the sections they most need, when they need them. Collins and Nathan keep their readers focused on the child in every situation, while always supporting reasonable boundaries in positive self-care for the adults who serve them. The authors remind us that the task of parenting is hard enough, even when Mom and Dad are healthy, energetic and emotionally strong. Add a diagnosis of cancer, heart disease, or a debilitating accident to the mix, and parenting can quickly become overwhelming. They acknowledge that anyone faced with a serious health crisis will be challenged daily to decide on treatment options, to reorient priorities, and to deal with the many stages of grief that humans suffer when confronted with survival issues. They help us remember that one member's illness will affect the entire family system, and explain how. The book is unique: - It deals with any kind of serious illness, not just cancer. - It explains how children of different age ranges commonly react to a parent's illness, or other family crisis. - It suggests specific language in talking to children of different ages. - A full chapter is devoted to advantages and disadvantages of using information technology, rarely covered in other books on this topic. - Based on extensive qualitative research. - Includes excerpts from interviews with parents and children coping with illness in the family. Both authors rely on their training, but also on early life experience in which they encountered traumatic family events. As a teenager, Courtney Nathan lost her mother to breast cancer. Leigh Collins suffered a terrible accident as a young child, and was confined in hospital for many weeks. Their book reflects a dedication to other families who face such life-altering circumstances. The book has received wide endorsement from medical doctors and social service personnel who know the urgent need for this information for their patients and clients.
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Autorenporträt
Leigh Collins, LCSW teaches social work at California State U., Bakersfield. She received her MSW from Tulane in 1998, and is licensed in both Calif. and Louisiana. In New Orleans, she helped form the child & adolescent therapy program at Jewish Family Service, served as Director of Counseling at Country Day School, and developed several award-winning programs, helping families during divorce, and in teaching children nonverbal ways to express emotions. She has taught at American University in Bulgaria. She lives in Bakersfield with her husband and teenage daughter.