Mental Health Interventions with Preschool Children von Robert D. Lyman | ISBN 9781489909589

Mental Health Interventions with Preschool Children

von Robert D. Lyman und Toni L. Hembree-Kigin
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinRobert D. Lyman
Autor / AutorinToni L. Hembree-Kigin
Buchcover Mental Health Interventions with Preschool Children | Robert D. Lyman | EAN 9781489909589 | ISBN 1-4899-0958-3 | ISBN 978-1-4899-0958-9
` A well-written book from which to begin to provide services to parents, families, and children. This book may well serve to generate further research into the covered topics, as one can quickly see the strengths, weaknesses, and limitations to what we currently know.... a valuable service to the profession. The authors' writing style is easy to read, and the book is well laid out and documented, with a list of references of where to obtain further information. If one desires a focused reference, introdution text, or refresher on assessment and intervention issues with preschoolers, this book will be welcome and used frequently... a significant initial contribution to the field of preschool mental health. '
Contemporary Psychology

Mental Health Interventions with Preschool Children

von Robert D. Lyman und Toni L. Hembree-Kigin
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinRobert D. Lyman
Autor / AutorinToni L. Hembree-Kigin
Preschool children have been largely neglected in the mental health treatment literature, although research has established that many behavioral and emotional disorders in children result from events occurring during the preschool years or are first manifested during this period. This has occurred for several reasons. Traditional psychoanalytic thinking has considered preschoolers to be too psychologically immature for complete manifestations of psychopathology, and the limited language abilities of young children have complicated assessment procedures and made them less appropriate for treatment approaches that are largely verbal in nature. In addition, the developmental complexity of the preschool period has deterred many researchers from investigating clinical issues with this age group. Partly as a result of the lack of information on preschoolers in the literature, practitioners have historically been uncomfortable in conduct ing assessments and initiating treatment with young children. They have often adopted a „wait and see“ attitude in which formal mental health diagnosis and treatment are not implemented until after the child's entry into school. Unfortunately, such a delay may mean wasting the time during which mental health interventions can be maximally effective. Recently, this attitude has changed and practitioners now recognize the need for assessment and treatment of behavioral and emotional disorders early in life. What they require to assist them in the timely delivery of such services is information about assessment and treatment procedures specifically designed for preschoolers and with demonstrated efficacy with that age group.