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This handbook addresses the delivery of high quality pediatric behavioral healthcare services that are multitiered, evidence-based, and integrated, involving interprofessional collaboration across child serving systems, such as pediatrician offices and schools. The book sets forth a contemporary, leading edge approach that reflects the relationship between biological and psychosocial development and the influence of multiple systems, including the family, community, school, and the healthcare system on child development and functioning. It assists child-focused providers in developing…mehr
This handbook addresses the delivery of high quality pediatric behavioral healthcare services that are multitiered, evidence-based, and integrated, involving interprofessional collaboration across child serving systems, such as pediatrician offices and schools. The book sets forth a contemporary, leading edge approach that reflects the relationship between biological and psychosocial development and the influence of multiple systems, including the family, community, school, and the healthcare system on child development and functioning. It assists child-focused providers in developing knowledge about the relationship between biological and psychosocial development and between pediatric physical health and behavioral health problems. Chapters cover common chronic illnesses and behavioral conditions and include guidelines for screening, assessment, diagnosis, prevention, and coordinated intervention. Chapters also include representative case studies that help illustrate efficacious, effective service-delivery approaches. The handbook concludes with recommendations for future research and directions for integrated pediatric behavioral healthcare.
Topics featured in the Handbook include:
Behavioral health aspects of chronic physical health conditions, including asthma, diabetes, chronic pain, traumatic brain injury, and cancer.
Physical health implications of behavioral health and educational problems, including ADHD, learning disabilities, substance abuse, and ASD.
Coping with chronic illness and medical stress.
Patient adherence to medical recommendations and treatments.
School reintegration after illness.
The Handbook of Pediatric Behavioral Healthcare is a must-have resource for researchers, professors, and graduate students as well as clinicians, therapists, and other practitioners in clinical child and school psychology,primary care medicine, social work, child and adolescent psychiatry, public health, health psychology, pediatric medicine, nursing, behavioral therapy, rehabilitation, and counseling.
Susan G. Forman, PhD, is University Professor at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. She has served as Chair of the Department of Applied Psychology, and Director of Clinical Training for the School Psychology Program in the Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, and as Vice President for Undergraduate Education at Rutgers. Prior to coming to Rutgers, she was Professor of Psychology and also served as Associate Provost at the University of South Carolina. Her research and scholarship focus on factors that influence intervention implementation, implementation of interprofessional collaborative approaches to pediatric behavioral healthcare, and the effectiveness of behavioral and cognitive-behavioral interventions in educational settings. She has authored approximately 100 publications, including Implementation of Mental Health Programs in Schools: A Change Agent’s Guide, published by the American Psychological Association. She has served on the editorial boards of many psychology and education journals, including School Psychology Review and the Journal of School Psychology. Her work has been supported by grants from the U.S. Department of Education, the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Science Foundation, and the American Psychological Association, as well as a number of corporate and family foundations. She has also served on the executive boards of the School Psychology Division of the American Psychological Association and the National Association of School Psychologists, and has served as Chair of the Council of Directors of School Psychology Programs. She is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association and has been elected to membership in the Society for the Study of School Psychology based on her scientific contributions to the field.
Jeffrey D. Shahidullah, PhD, is a licensed psychologist, a National Register Health Service Psychologist (HSP), and a Nationally Certified School Psychologist (NCSP). He is currently an Assistant Professor of School Psychology within the Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology at Rutgers University. He also holds an appointment as Adjunct Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. Dr. Shahidullah earned a BA in Psychology and EdS in School Psychology from Baylor University. He then earned a PhD in School Psychology at Michigan State University. He completed his APA-accredited predoctoral internship at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and postdoctoral fellowship at Geisinger Medical Center, both in pediatric psychology. While at CHOP, he was a Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental Disabilities (LEND) fellow. Dr. Shahidullah’s clinical, research, and training interests pertain to the development and delivery of models of integrated behavioral healthcare that are evidence-based and coordinated amongst the numerous systems in which children and adolescents interact – the family, school, community, and healthcare system. He is also interested in models of interdisciplinary training and collaboration amongst healthcare providers.
Inhaltsangabe
Section I: Foundations of Collaborative Pediatric Behavioral Health Care: Theory and Frameworks.- Chapter 1. Systems of Pediatric Healthcare Delivery and the Social-Ecological Framework.- Chapter 2. Multitiered, Evidence-Based Systems of Support.- Chapter 3. Interprofessional Collaboration.- Section II: Chronic Physical Health Conditions: Behavioral Health Aspects.- Chapter 4. Obesity.- Chapter 5. Diabetes.- Chapter 6. Asthma.- Chapter 7. Epilepsy.- Chapter 8. Traumatic Brain Injury/Concussion.- Chapter 9. Cancer.- Chapter 10. Chronic and Recurrent Pain.- Section III. Behavioral Health and Educational Problems: Physical Health Implications.- Chapter 11. Externalizing Disorders.- Chapter 12. Internalizing Disorders.- Chapter 13. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.- Chapter 14. Autism Spectrum Disorder.- Chapter 15. Learning Disabilities.- Chapter 16. Substance Abuse.- Chapter 17. Eating Disorders.- Chapter 18. Sleep Disorders.- Section IV: Cross-Cutting Issues.- Chapter 19. Coping with Chronic Illness and Medical Stress.- Chapter 20. Treatment Adherence.- Chapter 21. School Reintegration After Illness.- Chapter 22. Future Directions for Integrated Pediatric Behavioral Healthcare.
Section I: Foundations of Collaborative Pediatric Behavioral Health Care: Theory and Frameworks.- Chapter 1. Systems of Pediatric Healthcare Delivery and the Social-Ecological Framework.- Chapter 2. Multitiered, Evidence-Based Systems of Support.- Chapter 3. Interprofessional Collaboration.- Section II: Chronic Physical Health Conditions: Behavioral Health Aspects.- Chapter 4. Obesity.- Chapter 5. Diabetes.- Chapter 6. Asthma.- Chapter 7. Epilepsy.- Chapter 8. Traumatic Brain Injury/Concussion.- Chapter 9. Cancer.- Chapter 10. Chronic and Recurrent Pain.- Section III. Behavioral Health and Educational Problems: Physical Health Implications.- Chapter 11. Externalizing Disorders.- Chapter 12. Internalizing Disorders.- Chapter 13. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder.- Chapter 14. Autism Spectrum Disorder.- Chapter 15. Learning Disabilities.- Chapter 16. Substance Abuse.- Chapter 17. Eating Disorders.- Chapter 18. Sleep Disorders.- Section IV: Cross-Cutting Issues.- Chapter 19. Coping with Chronic Illness and Medical Stress.- Chapter 20. Treatment Adherence.- Chapter 21. School Reintegration After Illness.- Chapter 22. Future Directions for Integrated Pediatric Behavioral Healthcare.