Supporting Vulnerable Babies and Young Children
Interventions for Working with Trauma, Mental Health, Illness and Other Complex Challenges
Herausgeber: Bunston, Wendy; Jones, Sarah
Supporting Vulnerable Babies and Young Children
Interventions for Working with Trauma, Mental Health, Illness and Other Complex Challenges
Herausgeber: Bunston, Wendy; Jones, Sarah
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
A ground-breaking text that gathers together effective ways of working with complex or emerging practice issues when supporting vulnerable babies and young children. It explores a wide range of issues, from complex health needs through to trauma, mental health and adverse life experiences.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Helen WosuDirect Work with Vulnerable Children28,99 €
- Understanding Animal Abuse and How to Intervene with Children and Young People24,99 €
- Supporting Vulnerable Children in the Early Years30,99 €
- Innovative Therapeutic Life Story Work45,99 €
- Mental Health Interventions and Services for Vulnerable Children and Young People43,99 €
- Alison GopnikThe Philosophical Baby20,99 €
- Vulnerable Children and the Law119,99 €
-
-
-
A ground-breaking text that gathers together effective ways of working with complex or emerging practice issues when supporting vulnerable babies and young children. It explores a wide range of issues, from complex health needs through to trauma, mental health and adverse life experiences.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 153mm x 229mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 458g
- ISBN-13: 9781785923708
- ISBN-10: 1785923706
- Artikelnr.: 55294184
- Verlag: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. September 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 153mm x 229mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 458g
- ISBN-13: 9781785923708
- ISBN-10: 1785923706
- Artikelnr.: 55294184
Dr Wendy Bunston has been working with children in recovery from family violence for over 25 years. She has won several awards including the Australian Crime and Violence Prevention Awards in 2006 and 2010 and is a member of the Australian Association of Infant Mental Health. She is based in Victoria, Australia. Sarah J. Jones is a Mental Health Social Worker, Psychotherapist, Trainer and Supervisor. She has written for a number of publications. She is based in East Melbourne, Australia.
1. Introducing the Infant: And how to support vulnerable babies and young
children by Wendy Bunston & Sarah J Jones. 2. Reflective Supervision's
Essential Place in Thoughtful Practice by Julie Stone (Infant, Child and
Family Psychiatrist), Sarah J Jones and Wendy Bunston. 3. Restoring
Ruptured Bonds: The Young Child and Complex Trauma in Families by Fiona
True (Social Worker and Family Therapist, Member of the Teaching Faculty
and Co-Director of the Center for Children and Relational Trauma, Ackerman
Institute for the Family, New York). 4. Developing an Intervention for
Infants and Young Children in Foster Care: Watch Me Play! by Jenifer
Wakelyn (Child Psychotherapist, London). 5. Keeping the Child in Mind when
thinking about Violence in Families by Angelique Jenney (Social Worker,
Director of Family Violence Services for Child Development Institute,
Toronto). 6. 'Murder in their Family': Making space for the experience of
the infant impacted by familial murder by Kathy Eyre (Senior Occupational
Therapist/Family Therapist, Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital Mental
Health Service), Nicole Milburn (Clinical Psychologist and infant mental
health specialist) and Wendy Bunston. 7. Homelessness in Infancy: Finding
'home' for babies in crisis accommodation after family violence by Wendy
Bunston. 8. Self-Determining Support for Indigenous Children in Australia:
The Bubup Wilam case study by Angie Zerella (Education and Training Manager
at Bubup Wilam for Early Aboriginal Child and Family Centre), Lisa Thorpe
(proud Gunditjmara/Gunnai woman and current CEO of Bubup Wilam for Early
Learning Aboriginal Child and Family Centre), Luella Monson-Wilbraham
(Executive Officer for First 1000 Days Australia) and Kerry Arabena (Meriam
woman, consultant, business owner and former Chair for Indigenous Health,
University of Melbourne). 9. Infants and Young Children in the Aftermath of
the Great East Japan Earthquake, Tsunami and Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear
Power Plant Accident by Hisako Watanabe (Tokyo, Japan, Previous Director of
Division of Infant, Child and Adolescent Mental Health and Assistant
Professor at the Department of Pediatrics). 10. Play with us: Bringing hope
and healing to Kwazulu-Natal's children by Rachel Rozentals-Thresher
(Dlalanathi's Director since 2007), Robyn Hemmens (has worked in the
children's sector in South Africa since the 80's) and Julie Stone (Infant,
Child & Perinatal Psychiatrist, Gippsland, Victoria and Founding Director
of the Uthando Project, working for the children of Kwa-Zulu Natal, South
Africa). 11. The 'International Infant': Examining the experiences and
clinical needs of separated and reunited transnational infant-parent dyads:
An essay by Natasha Whitfield (Clinical Psychologist, Ontario). 12.
'Invisible Children? How attachment theory and evidenced-based procedures
can bring to light the hidden experience of children at risk from their
parents by Ben Grey (Senior Lecturer in Attachment Studies at the
University of Roehampton) and Jeremy Gunson (Child & Adolescent
Psychotherapist working in the NHS, Birmingham). 13. Infants and Young
Children Living within High Conflict Parental Disputes: "Keep me safe and
organise my emotional world" An Interview with Professor Jennifer McIntosh
(Clinical Psychologist, Professor of Attachment Studies at Deakin
University) by Sarah J Jones. 14. Playing behind the Barbed-Wire Fence:
Asylum-seeking infants and their parents by Christine Hill (Maternal Child
Health Nurse and Infant Psychotherapist, Melbourne, Australia). 15. Infants
with Cancer: The oncology unit as their second home by Maria McCarthy
(Academic Researcher, Family Therapist, Melbourne) and Helen Shoemark
(Associate Professor of Music Therapy at Temple University, Philadelphia) &
Addendum: A mother's perspective. 16. High-Risk Infant Mental Health
Outreach: Creating a professional community of caregivers using a
collaborative mental health and nursing approach by Paul Robertson (Child
and Adolescent Psychiatrist), Amity McSwan (Accredited mental health social
worker and trained family therapist, Victoria), Louise Dockery (Registered
Nurse, Registered Midfwife and Maternal and Child Health Nurse, Victoria).
17. The Art of Finding Authentic Discourses for Parents about and with
their Donor Conceived Children by Sarah J Jones.
children by Wendy Bunston & Sarah J Jones. 2. Reflective Supervision's
Essential Place in Thoughtful Practice by Julie Stone (Infant, Child and
Family Psychiatrist), Sarah J Jones and Wendy Bunston. 3. Restoring
Ruptured Bonds: The Young Child and Complex Trauma in Families by Fiona
True (Social Worker and Family Therapist, Member of the Teaching Faculty
and Co-Director of the Center for Children and Relational Trauma, Ackerman
Institute for the Family, New York). 4. Developing an Intervention for
Infants and Young Children in Foster Care: Watch Me Play! by Jenifer
Wakelyn (Child Psychotherapist, London). 5. Keeping the Child in Mind when
thinking about Violence in Families by Angelique Jenney (Social Worker,
Director of Family Violence Services for Child Development Institute,
Toronto). 6. 'Murder in their Family': Making space for the experience of
the infant impacted by familial murder by Kathy Eyre (Senior Occupational
Therapist/Family Therapist, Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital Mental
Health Service), Nicole Milburn (Clinical Psychologist and infant mental
health specialist) and Wendy Bunston. 7. Homelessness in Infancy: Finding
'home' for babies in crisis accommodation after family violence by Wendy
Bunston. 8. Self-Determining Support for Indigenous Children in Australia:
The Bubup Wilam case study by Angie Zerella (Education and Training Manager
at Bubup Wilam for Early Aboriginal Child and Family Centre), Lisa Thorpe
(proud Gunditjmara/Gunnai woman and current CEO of Bubup Wilam for Early
Learning Aboriginal Child and Family Centre), Luella Monson-Wilbraham
(Executive Officer for First 1000 Days Australia) and Kerry Arabena (Meriam
woman, consultant, business owner and former Chair for Indigenous Health,
University of Melbourne). 9. Infants and Young Children in the Aftermath of
the Great East Japan Earthquake, Tsunami and Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear
Power Plant Accident by Hisako Watanabe (Tokyo, Japan, Previous Director of
Division of Infant, Child and Adolescent Mental Health and Assistant
Professor at the Department of Pediatrics). 10. Play with us: Bringing hope
and healing to Kwazulu-Natal's children by Rachel Rozentals-Thresher
(Dlalanathi's Director since 2007), Robyn Hemmens (has worked in the
children's sector in South Africa since the 80's) and Julie Stone (Infant,
Child & Perinatal Psychiatrist, Gippsland, Victoria and Founding Director
of the Uthando Project, working for the children of Kwa-Zulu Natal, South
Africa). 11. The 'International Infant': Examining the experiences and
clinical needs of separated and reunited transnational infant-parent dyads:
An essay by Natasha Whitfield (Clinical Psychologist, Ontario). 12.
'Invisible Children? How attachment theory and evidenced-based procedures
can bring to light the hidden experience of children at risk from their
parents by Ben Grey (Senior Lecturer in Attachment Studies at the
University of Roehampton) and Jeremy Gunson (Child & Adolescent
Psychotherapist working in the NHS, Birmingham). 13. Infants and Young
Children Living within High Conflict Parental Disputes: "Keep me safe and
organise my emotional world" An Interview with Professor Jennifer McIntosh
(Clinical Psychologist, Professor of Attachment Studies at Deakin
University) by Sarah J Jones. 14. Playing behind the Barbed-Wire Fence:
Asylum-seeking infants and their parents by Christine Hill (Maternal Child
Health Nurse and Infant Psychotherapist, Melbourne, Australia). 15. Infants
with Cancer: The oncology unit as their second home by Maria McCarthy
(Academic Researcher, Family Therapist, Melbourne) and Helen Shoemark
(Associate Professor of Music Therapy at Temple University, Philadelphia) &
Addendum: A mother's perspective. 16. High-Risk Infant Mental Health
Outreach: Creating a professional community of caregivers using a
collaborative mental health and nursing approach by Paul Robertson (Child
and Adolescent Psychiatrist), Amity McSwan (Accredited mental health social
worker and trained family therapist, Victoria), Louise Dockery (Registered
Nurse, Registered Midfwife and Maternal and Child Health Nurse, Victoria).
17. The Art of Finding Authentic Discourses for Parents about and with
their Donor Conceived Children by Sarah J Jones.
1. Introducing the Infant: And how to support vulnerable babies and young
children by Wendy Bunston & Sarah J Jones. 2. Reflective Supervision's
Essential Place in Thoughtful Practice by Julie Stone (Infant, Child and
Family Psychiatrist), Sarah J Jones and Wendy Bunston. 3. Restoring
Ruptured Bonds: The Young Child and Complex Trauma in Families by Fiona
True (Social Worker and Family Therapist, Member of the Teaching Faculty
and Co-Director of the Center for Children and Relational Trauma, Ackerman
Institute for the Family, New York). 4. Developing an Intervention for
Infants and Young Children in Foster Care: Watch Me Play! by Jenifer
Wakelyn (Child Psychotherapist, London). 5. Keeping the Child in Mind when
thinking about Violence in Families by Angelique Jenney (Social Worker,
Director of Family Violence Services for Child Development Institute,
Toronto). 6. 'Murder in their Family': Making space for the experience of
the infant impacted by familial murder by Kathy Eyre (Senior Occupational
Therapist/Family Therapist, Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital Mental
Health Service), Nicole Milburn (Clinical Psychologist and infant mental
health specialist) and Wendy Bunston. 7. Homelessness in Infancy: Finding
'home' for babies in crisis accommodation after family violence by Wendy
Bunston. 8. Self-Determining Support for Indigenous Children in Australia:
The Bubup Wilam case study by Angie Zerella (Education and Training Manager
at Bubup Wilam for Early Aboriginal Child and Family Centre), Lisa Thorpe
(proud Gunditjmara/Gunnai woman and current CEO of Bubup Wilam for Early
Learning Aboriginal Child and Family Centre), Luella Monson-Wilbraham
(Executive Officer for First 1000 Days Australia) and Kerry Arabena (Meriam
woman, consultant, business owner and former Chair for Indigenous Health,
University of Melbourne). 9. Infants and Young Children in the Aftermath of
the Great East Japan Earthquake, Tsunami and Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear
Power Plant Accident by Hisako Watanabe (Tokyo, Japan, Previous Director of
Division of Infant, Child and Adolescent Mental Health and Assistant
Professor at the Department of Pediatrics). 10. Play with us: Bringing hope
and healing to Kwazulu-Natal's children by Rachel Rozentals-Thresher
(Dlalanathi's Director since 2007), Robyn Hemmens (has worked in the
children's sector in South Africa since the 80's) and Julie Stone (Infant,
Child & Perinatal Psychiatrist, Gippsland, Victoria and Founding Director
of the Uthando Project, working for the children of Kwa-Zulu Natal, South
Africa). 11. The 'International Infant': Examining the experiences and
clinical needs of separated and reunited transnational infant-parent dyads:
An essay by Natasha Whitfield (Clinical Psychologist, Ontario). 12.
'Invisible Children? How attachment theory and evidenced-based procedures
can bring to light the hidden experience of children at risk from their
parents by Ben Grey (Senior Lecturer in Attachment Studies at the
University of Roehampton) and Jeremy Gunson (Child & Adolescent
Psychotherapist working in the NHS, Birmingham). 13. Infants and Young
Children Living within High Conflict Parental Disputes: "Keep me safe and
organise my emotional world" An Interview with Professor Jennifer McIntosh
(Clinical Psychologist, Professor of Attachment Studies at Deakin
University) by Sarah J Jones. 14. Playing behind the Barbed-Wire Fence:
Asylum-seeking infants and their parents by Christine Hill (Maternal Child
Health Nurse and Infant Psychotherapist, Melbourne, Australia). 15. Infants
with Cancer: The oncology unit as their second home by Maria McCarthy
(Academic Researcher, Family Therapist, Melbourne) and Helen Shoemark
(Associate Professor of Music Therapy at Temple University, Philadelphia) &
Addendum: A mother's perspective. 16. High-Risk Infant Mental Health
Outreach: Creating a professional community of caregivers using a
collaborative mental health and nursing approach by Paul Robertson (Child
and Adolescent Psychiatrist), Amity McSwan (Accredited mental health social
worker and trained family therapist, Victoria), Louise Dockery (Registered
Nurse, Registered Midfwife and Maternal and Child Health Nurse, Victoria).
17. The Art of Finding Authentic Discourses for Parents about and with
their Donor Conceived Children by Sarah J Jones.
children by Wendy Bunston & Sarah J Jones. 2. Reflective Supervision's
Essential Place in Thoughtful Practice by Julie Stone (Infant, Child and
Family Psychiatrist), Sarah J Jones and Wendy Bunston. 3. Restoring
Ruptured Bonds: The Young Child and Complex Trauma in Families by Fiona
True (Social Worker and Family Therapist, Member of the Teaching Faculty
and Co-Director of the Center for Children and Relational Trauma, Ackerman
Institute for the Family, New York). 4. Developing an Intervention for
Infants and Young Children in Foster Care: Watch Me Play! by Jenifer
Wakelyn (Child Psychotherapist, London). 5. Keeping the Child in Mind when
thinking about Violence in Families by Angelique Jenney (Social Worker,
Director of Family Violence Services for Child Development Institute,
Toronto). 6. 'Murder in their Family': Making space for the experience of
the infant impacted by familial murder by Kathy Eyre (Senior Occupational
Therapist/Family Therapist, Melbourne's Royal Children's Hospital Mental
Health Service), Nicole Milburn (Clinical Psychologist and infant mental
health specialist) and Wendy Bunston. 7. Homelessness in Infancy: Finding
'home' for babies in crisis accommodation after family violence by Wendy
Bunston. 8. Self-Determining Support for Indigenous Children in Australia:
The Bubup Wilam case study by Angie Zerella (Education and Training Manager
at Bubup Wilam for Early Aboriginal Child and Family Centre), Lisa Thorpe
(proud Gunditjmara/Gunnai woman and current CEO of Bubup Wilam for Early
Learning Aboriginal Child and Family Centre), Luella Monson-Wilbraham
(Executive Officer for First 1000 Days Australia) and Kerry Arabena (Meriam
woman, consultant, business owner and former Chair for Indigenous Health,
University of Melbourne). 9. Infants and Young Children in the Aftermath of
the Great East Japan Earthquake, Tsunami and Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear
Power Plant Accident by Hisako Watanabe (Tokyo, Japan, Previous Director of
Division of Infant, Child and Adolescent Mental Health and Assistant
Professor at the Department of Pediatrics). 10. Play with us: Bringing hope
and healing to Kwazulu-Natal's children by Rachel Rozentals-Thresher
(Dlalanathi's Director since 2007), Robyn Hemmens (has worked in the
children's sector in South Africa since the 80's) and Julie Stone (Infant,
Child & Perinatal Psychiatrist, Gippsland, Victoria and Founding Director
of the Uthando Project, working for the children of Kwa-Zulu Natal, South
Africa). 11. The 'International Infant': Examining the experiences and
clinical needs of separated and reunited transnational infant-parent dyads:
An essay by Natasha Whitfield (Clinical Psychologist, Ontario). 12.
'Invisible Children? How attachment theory and evidenced-based procedures
can bring to light the hidden experience of children at risk from their
parents by Ben Grey (Senior Lecturer in Attachment Studies at the
University of Roehampton) and Jeremy Gunson (Child & Adolescent
Psychotherapist working in the NHS, Birmingham). 13. Infants and Young
Children Living within High Conflict Parental Disputes: "Keep me safe and
organise my emotional world" An Interview with Professor Jennifer McIntosh
(Clinical Psychologist, Professor of Attachment Studies at Deakin
University) by Sarah J Jones. 14. Playing behind the Barbed-Wire Fence:
Asylum-seeking infants and their parents by Christine Hill (Maternal Child
Health Nurse and Infant Psychotherapist, Melbourne, Australia). 15. Infants
with Cancer: The oncology unit as their second home by Maria McCarthy
(Academic Researcher, Family Therapist, Melbourne) and Helen Shoemark
(Associate Professor of Music Therapy at Temple University, Philadelphia) &
Addendum: A mother's perspective. 16. High-Risk Infant Mental Health
Outreach: Creating a professional community of caregivers using a
collaborative mental health and nursing approach by Paul Robertson (Child
and Adolescent Psychiatrist), Amity McSwan (Accredited mental health social
worker and trained family therapist, Victoria), Louise Dockery (Registered
Nurse, Registered Midfwife and Maternal and Child Health Nurse, Victoria).
17. The Art of Finding Authentic Discourses for Parents about and with
their Donor Conceived Children by Sarah J Jones.