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Effect of the Prepare curriculum on the social competency of children in residential treatmentTate, Stephen Lee. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Psy. D.)--Wheaton College Graduate School, Wheaton, IL, 2002. / Abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 38-45).
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Child, family, and school predictors of outcome of a school-based intervention for children with disruptive behavior problemsRicherson, Lauren A. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Ohio University, June, 2004. / Title from PDF t.p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 93-104)
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African American perceptions of childhood behavioral disorders and mental health servicesWellington, Chanté Camea. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Duquesne University, 2007. / Title from document title page. Abstract included in electronic submission form. Includes bibliographical references (p. 86-95) and index.
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A systematic review : the effects of trauma on child mental health and well-beingAlmendro, Martinique January 2016 (has links)
Magister Artium (Child and Family Studies) - MA(CFS) / Trauma exposure during childhood increases the risk of multitude complex post-trauma symptomology. Extensive research has been conducted on the effects of trauma exposure on adults, and the findings have been thereafter applied to children. This is problematic due to the developmental differences between adults and children. There is thus a need to understand the unique symptomology of children, who have been exposed to trauma, as understanding the effects of childhood trauma will certainly aid in the prevention and treatment of childhood trauma. This study incorporated a systematic review methodology to analyse the effects of exposure to childhood trauma on children’s mental health and wellbeing.
Relevant literature from all the methodological paradigms that were published during the specified time period of this study (2000 – 2016) were considered for. Furthermore, the inclusion criteria also specified that only studies of which the participants were children were allowed to be included in the review; studies focusing on adults and their exposure were deliberately excluded. The initial search strategy yielded a total of 316 articles; after all duplicates had been removed and, the titles and abstracts of the remaining articles had been assessed, the number of relevant articles was reduced to 22. These 22 articles were thereafter assessed by means of a critical appraisal tool to evaluate whether they were suitable for
inclusion. Several articles were excluded as the focus of the studies were on treatment modalities and the effects of child trauma in adulthood. This signifies a gap in the literature with regard to studies that investigate the effects of child trauma. Ultimately, only 13 of the 22 articles remained. These underwent full-text evaluation and data extraction. Results of this study provide insight into the effects of child trauma on child mental health and well-being. Based on thematic analysis, the results clearly show that children, who are traumatised, have a negative worldview. In addition, the symptoms they manifest are complex, which often lead to misdiagnosis. Moreover, these studies also explain the resilience processes involved when a child is exposed to trauma. In essence, this study provides parents, caregivers, researchers and mental health professionals with an all-inclusive understanding of the effects of childhood trauma based on a scientific body of literature.
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An art based support programme for the amelioration of general psychological distress in marginalised children in South AfricaArmstrong, Meredith 28 June 2011 (has links)
This study aimed to construct, and implement an in-school "art expression" based programme designed to aid in mitigation of psychological stress, behavioural difficulties, and self-negativity frequently experienced by marginalised children. It was developed for application within schools that cater for children exposed to neglect and/or abuse resulting from poverty in South Africa. This programme outline was developed and implemented through intensive exploration and review of previously effective art therapy, art expressive methods and techniques in similar contexts, together with the knowledge and experience of a qualified art therapist and educational psychologist. Data was collected through open-ended informal qualitative interviews, observations, and photographs of artworks produced during sessions. These were then analysed in conjunction, using the content analysis method, visual interpretive measures and thematic analysis. This enquiry documented the process of art creation through "art expression", and its ability to ameliorate psychological difficulties affecting marginalised children in South Africa. Following the establishment of trust between the researchers and the participants, the results found that the use of different art modalities demonstrated predominantly positive results in varying degrees. It is hoped that this study can be used to further practical interventions of this nature in comparable milieus in South Africa.
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NFB kids: portrayals of children by the National Film Board of Canada, 1939-1989Low, Brian John 05 1900 (has links)
Social historians have been understandably wary of the contents of motion pictures.
Their reticence to use film as a socio-historical document stems from a valid assumption that,
since almost every film is to some degree a fictional construction, no film or group of films
may be said to accurately reflect a society. In this study, however, a society is presented that
a historian may credibly claim to be accurately represented by film since it exists wholly in
film. It is the cinematic society created by the film archives of the National Film Board of
Canada (NFB).
'NFB society' is set in the 8,000 films produced since 1939 under the NFB mandate:
"to interpret Canada to Canadians." Anchored physically, socially, and intellectually to the
course of Canadian society and the state, this cinematic micro-society possesses a coherent
Social history, which can be re-created by juxtaposing, synchronically and diachronically,
films with like social scenarios. In so doing, patterns of social life, especially social relations
in the micro-society may be observed in transience. NFB children play a significant role in
this transience of NFB society, particularly in regard to dramatic changes in family, school,
and community life which take place after the 1960s.
Key to an explanation of the historical movement that develops within NFB families,
schools, and communities are the 'progressive' socializing structures that replace traditional
ones in the society in celluloid. Of particular interest are the social outcomes of the mental
hygiene movement following its introduction into Film Board families in 1946 and schools in
1953. Over the decades of this study, the authority of NFB parents, teachers, and community
leaders over the socialization of children is diminished by their adoption of the principles of
mental hygiene, their influence over their children gradually supplanted by the influence of
the cinematic state. / Education, Faculty of / Educational Studies (EDST), Department of / Graduate
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Die bydrae van die kinderpsigiatriese verpleegkundige tot primêre geestesgesondheidSteyn, Erika 27 August 2014 (has links)
M.Cur. (Psychiatric Nursing) / In view of statistics available there is a definite need for a primary mental health service for children in the Republic of South Africa. Very little literature is available on the functions of the child psychiatric nurse, in this regard. This study was done to determine the functions of the child psychiatric nurse in the deliverance of a primary mental health care service for children. It was done by using the opinions of practicing child psychiatrists and child psychiatric nurses in South Africa.
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Correlates of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Disorder of Extreme Stress Not Otherwise Specified among Palestinian Child Ex-DetaineesNabhan, Inshirah Nimer 08 1900 (has links)
The objective of this study is to investigate the variations in the type of trauma (post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and disorder of extreme stress not otherwise specified (DESNOS) resulting first from group membership, and second from variations in socioeconomic status, and last, from exposure to physical and psychological methods of interrogation due to imprisonment. I use a diverse sample of 202 child ex-detainees who served sentences in Israeli prisons and were 17 years of age or less at the time of arrest. Various regression techniques were utilized to determine the most parsimonious way to distinguish between the three groups in their trauma responses. The key finding in this study is that child refugee ex-detainees living in refugee camps, in general, did not report PTSD or DESNOS reactions compared to their counterparts. Continuing PTSD and DESNOS symptoms were more prevalent among the group of refugees living outside the camps. However, there is at least one finding that supported what I hypothesized: refugees living in camps were more likely to experience elevated levels of alterations in attention or consciousness (DESNOS2). For refugees in camps, the DESNOS absence tells us that the volatile childhood these children experienced was not associated with severe pathological reactions or heightened sensitization to trauma. In contrast, refugees living outside camps suffer from alterations in self-perception DESNOS4 symptomology, in addition, to elevated levels of complex trauma DESNOS and they qualified for the DESNOS diagnosis more than the other two groups of children. Refugees living outside camps were the only group subjected to interpersonal stressors.
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The psyhological problems of children with HIV/AIDS in TshwaneHecker, Hilda Elizabeth January 2016 (has links)
In order to determine what mental health problems South African children living with HIV
experience, interviews were conducted with HIV-positive children and their caregivers at a
paediatric HIV clinic in Tshwane. The interviews with the children included assessments that
focused on the children's self-esteem (Self-Description Questionnaire), experiences of anxiety
(RCMAS), and the coping strategies that they employed in daily living (Kidcope). The
interviews with caregivers included a questionnaire about demographic details, the Parental
Stress Index (PSI), and the Coping with Children's Negative Emotions Scale (CCNES).
Caregivers also completed the Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL), which assesses a range of
psychological problems in children. These results were compared to a sample of HIV-negative
children and their caregivers from the same community.
Although many children living with HIV-infection displayed clinical levels of somatic
and depressive symptoms, these did not differ at statistically significant rates from the HIVnegative
comparison group. Furthermore, children living with HIV were not found to experience
clinically significant levels of anxiety as assessed by the RCMAS. Children living with HIV
were found to employ more adaptive coping strategies than maladaptive coping strategies and
significantly fewer maladaptive coping strategies than HIV-uninfected children use. Children
living with HIV were also found to have significantly higher positive self-evaluations than HIVuninfected
children.
The results of the caregiver assessments indicated that caregivers of children living with
HIV experience more distress in their relationship with their child and tend to engage less with
negative emotional displays of their children than do caregivers of HIV-uninfected children. / Dissertation (MA)--University of Pretoria, 2016. / Psychology / MA / Unrestricted
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Predictors of Improvement for Children Served in Developing Systems of CareWalton, Betty A. 01 August 2006 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / The research base regarding the effectiveness of systems of care for children with serious emotional disturbances is limited. The incremental development of systems of care in Indiana provides an opportunity to compare the outcomes of children served in these child and family wraparound teams with the outcomes of a matched sample of children receiving usual public mental health services. Functional assessment data from a state database was examined using logistic regression models. The level of development of wraparound services was used as a fidelity measure.
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