Sentences with phrase «caregiver dyad»

Expressed emotion in client - professional caregiver dyad: are symptoms, coping strategies and personality related?
Expressed emotion in the resident - professional caregiver dyad: Are symptoms, coping and personality related?
Support services usually take place in child / caregiver dyads, offering opportunities for positive outcomes for both the child and the caregiver.

Not exact matches

Existing interventions among Asian populations focus mainly on imparting practical skills to caregivers of patients with cancer requiring palliative care, through home - based care or home visits from nurses, 21 — 23 with an emphasis on coping with end - of - life issues and bereavement.24, 25 However, interventions for caregivers of non-palliative care recipients tend to be delivered via the phone26 or over the internet, 27 while others work with couple dyads, where one spouse provides care for the other who has cancer.28
According to a meta - analysis of 75 studies conducted on caregiver - infant attachment with more than 4,500 caregiver - child dyads, behavior - based, reciprocal, and mutually reinforcing interactions that promoted caregiver sensitivity and responsiveness were most likely to change caregiver behavior and influence attachment patterns (Dunst & Kassow, 2008).
By watching caregivers model appropriate emotion regulation behaviors, discuss affective states, and modify their environments to alleviate negative affect, children internalize their histories of interactions with caregivers, and develop expectations and scripts for interactions in the parent - child dyad [45].
Typically, the child is seen with his or her primary caregiver, and the dyad is the unit of treatment.
These treatment services focus on dyad work with the child and their caregivers and include Triple P — Level 4, Parent - Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT), Incredible Years, and Promoting First Relationships (PFR).
Enhance the caregiver - child relationship to increase trust, security, and closeness between the dyad and ultimately between other family members
The data revealed that the majority of the dyads was composed of mothers — main responsible for the care with the child — and biological parents, step fathers, grandmothers, cousins and foster parents, performing the role of secondary caregiver.
This working paper presents findings from the analyses of two different observational studies of caregiver - pre-adolescent (4 - 13 years, referred to as the «pre-adolescent study») and caregiver - adolescent (10 - 17 years, referred to as the «adolescent study») dyads.
Using clinical data from 137 caregiver - child dyads, the main goal of the current study was to test the psychometric properties of an adapted version of the Crowell Procedure among preschoolers.
Caregivers of excluded dyads had lower scores on the PSI and BSI.
Participants included 335 mother / female - caregiver and child (46 % boys, > 90 % African American; age range 9 — 16 years [M = 12.11, SD = 1.60]-RRB- dyads living in moderate - to - high violence areas.
A total of 731 indigent caregiver — child dyads from a multisite randomized intervention trial were examined.
Methods Caregiver / youth dyads (n = 120) completed diabetes specific measures of family functioning regarding diabetes management and structured adherence interviews.
In a study with 50 foster mother — infant dyads, Dozier et al. (2001) found a significant association between the caregiver's state of mind and the quality of the infant's attachment with non-autonomous and dismissing foster mothers tending to have children with more disorganized patterns of attachment and the more secure and autonomous foster mothers having more secure children.
Ninety - three low income inner - city African American consumer - family dyads were tested to see the possible impact of family factors, based on the EE and family caregiver burden literatures, on consumer psychosocial functioning (work, social, and independent living).
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