We have included reviews of the treatment as well as prevention of «child abuse» on the grounds that
treatment of abusive parenting can prevent the development of mental illness concomitant on abuse and could have beneficial effects on children other than the victim of abuse.
Not exact matches
If the child becomes symptomatic, with the presumed cause being the pathogenic
parenting coalition with the allied
parent, then the child's time with the allied pathogenic
parent is reduced in order to reduce the pathogenic influence
of the allied
parent who is creating the child's symptoms, and the child's time with the targeted - rejected
parent is increased to provide more
treatment - related time with the targeted
parent to restore the
parent - child bond
of shared affection that is being damaged by the pathogenic
parenting of the allied psychologically
abusive parent.
Few prevention programs have been rigorously evaluated, and only a few have proven effective.60, 61 Health - care based prevention programs, including
parent education programs to reduce rates
of abusive head trauma, and improving physician ambulatory care practices to help families decrease risk factors for child maltreatment have shown good initial results, but require further evaluation.62, 63 Specific intensive home visitation programs such as nurse home visiting programs for first - time mothers have proven to be both clinically and cost effective in preventing maltreatment.64, 65 However, a program
of nurse home visitation has been found ineffective as a
treatment model for
abusive and neglectful families, highlighting the importance
of primary prevention, as well as the need to rigorously evaluate potential
treatments for
abusive families.66 Child welfare services are historically structured as short - term interventions that monitor families for recidivism, provide
parenting education and assist with referrals to community - based services.
Birth
parents wish for improved life circumstances — attending college / finishing school, repairing relationships, escaping an
abusive relationship, seeking
treatment for substance abuse, working themselves out
of poverty, etc..
«
Parent - Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT), originally developed for families
of children with disruptive behavior disorders, has shown potential to fill this gap in childhood trauma
treatment by helping physically
abusive parents transform their
parenting practices and by offering a variety
of skills to non-offending
parents and caregivers,» said a team
of researchers from Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.
Combined
Parent - Child Cognitive - Behavioral Therapy (CPC - CBT) has been rated by the CEBC in the areas
of: Prevention
of Child Abuse and Neglect (Secondary) Programs,
Parent Training Programs that Address Child Abuse and Neglect, Interventions for
Abusive Behavior and Trauma
Treatment - Client - Level Interventions (Child & Adolescent).
Capias Capias Mittimus CAPTA (Child Abuse Prevention and
Treatment Act) Caption Case Management Cause
of Action CEJ (Continuing Exclusive Jurisdiction) Central Authority Certification Certified Divorce Financial Analyst Cestui Que Trust Charge to Jury Child Abduction Child Abuse and Neglect Child Representative Child Support Enforcement Child Support Guidelines Child Support Payment Children's Rights Circuit Court Citation Civil Code Civil Contempt Civil Law Civil Liberties Civil Rights Civil Union Clear and Convincing Evidence Classifications
of Law Clerk
of the Court COBRA (Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act) Codicil Cohabitation COLA (Cost
of Living Adjustment) Collaborative Divorce Collaborative Law Commencement
of Action Common Law Common Law Marriage Community Property Competency Complainant Complaint for Divorce Concurring Opinion Condonation Confidential Privilege Conflict
of Interest Conjugal Rights Consanguinity Consent Order Conservator Consolidation Constitution Contemnor Contempt
of Court Contested Divorce Contingency Fee Continuance Contract Co-Respondent Corroborative Witness Cost Analysis Counsel Counseling Count Counterclaim Court Court Costs Court
of Equity Court Order Court Reporter Court Services Officer Covenant Marriage Coverture CRC (Children's Rights Council) Criminal Contempt Cross-Examination Cruel and
Abusive Treatment CSRA (Child Support Recovery Act) Custodial
Parent Custody Custody Affidavit Custody Evaluation Custody Preference
In the absence
of a criminal conviction, family courts are unlikely to keep an
abusive parent from having contact with the child, although it may be supervised and the
parent may be required to get
treatment.
Summary: (To include comparison groups, outcomes, measures, notable limitations) This paper examined Combined
Parent - Child Cognitive - Behavioral Therapy (CPC - CBT), a treatment model that addresses the complex needs of the parent who engages in physically abusive behavior and the traumatized
Parent - Child Cognitive - Behavioral Therapy (CPC - CBT), a
treatment model that addresses the complex needs
of the
parent who engages in physically abusive behavior and the traumatized
parent who engages in physically
abusive behavior and the traumatized child.
This program involves the family or other support systems in the individual's
treatment:
Parents are provided their own counselor to enable them to discuss any issues regarding how the sexually
abusive behavior
of their child has impacted upon them.
During the last phase
of treatment when improvements have been reported in
parent - child interactions, positive
parenting, and children's fear, clarification involves the clinician encouraging the children to write about or share their
abusive experiences while focusing on their thoughts and feelings associated with the abuse.
• What is going to happen to your teenager if you don't take steps now to change his behavior right now • Why when you listen to what your child says to you, you are missing 93 %
of what is going on • Your teen's number one priority, and why this stops him from obeying you • Why all the behavioral techniques you have read in so many
parenting books never work on your child... and what does work • Why using punishments, consequences, and coercion will destroy your home • Four reasons your teenager will defy your requests and refuse to obey you, and what you can do about each one • Medical interventions: medicines and natural supplements that have been proven to help with ODD behavior in 90 %
of teens • The four underlying causes
of defiant behavior, and how you can use them to eliminate arguing, talking back, and
abusive behavior • Why most behavioral
treatments and
parenting books fail to help with defiant teenagers, and why they usually make things worse • How to side step power struggles and why you must do that • 9
parenting strategies that experts commonly recommend that will absolutely positively never work with your ODD child • Three reasons why rewarding good behavior is going to backfire - unless you know exactly the correct way to do it • How you may be helping your teenager to become defiant • Why your teenager sees you as an irritating nag, and how to change that • Five problems that you create when you respond to bad behavior • Why rewards and punishments don't work with defiant teens and what you can do instead that does work • 5 easy to use strategies to get your teen to cooperate • The key to understanding and eliminating the underlying cause
of bad behavior • The one word that will allow you to control any argument you have with your child, allow you to maintain your dignity and authority as a
parent, show your child that you are the one who is in charge • Ten keys to coping with a defiant child • How to handle a behavior problem in school • Three strategies that will put an end to homework battles • How to make the teacher your ally to eliminate your child's school defiance • A six word sentence that will get your child to obey you • Five things your child's teacher needs to know in order to be successful with your child • How to change bedtime from a battle into a chance to build your relationship • How a few properly placed words will transform your child and make him obedient and cooperative • 5 easy ways to gain your child's cooperation • How to refocus to get your child through school and get him to excel at what he is really good at • Why what you say and what your child hears have almost nothing in common • How to really uncover what is bothering your child so that you can improve his behavior
One
parent who can prove allegations that the other
parent is
abusive, is addicted to drugs or alcohol and unwilling to receive
treatment, or would otherwise be a danger to the child can sometimes win a judgment
of sole custody.