Details

Working with Adoptive Parents


Working with Adoptive Parents

Research, Theory, and Therapeutic Interventions
1. Aufl.

von: Virginia M. Brabender, April E. Fallon

47,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 15.05.2013
ISBN/EAN: 9781118418918
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 320

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Beschreibungen

<p><b>Practical techniques for guiding parents through the stages of adoption and beyond</b></p> <p>Editors Virginia Brabender and April Fallon are clinical psychologists and also adoptive parents whose families are acquainted with both the uncertainty and joy of adoption. In <i>Working with Adoptive Parents</i>, they offer an in-depth treatment of the distinctive needs, feelings, impulses, expectations, and conflicts that adoptive parents experience through the stages of adoption and beyond. This volume offers a comprehensive picture of adoption through an exploration of the experiences and developmental processes of the adoptive parent.</p> <p>Featuring contributions from mental health professionals whose careers have focused on work with families through the adoption process, this unique book:</p> <ul> <li>Covers the theory, research, and practice of adoptive parenting throughout the life cycle</li> <li>Explores the issues unique to the adoptive mother and adoptive father as they traverse the stages of parenting</li> <li>Offers a close look at families with special needs children</li> <li>Acknowledges and explores the great diversity among adoptive families and the kinship networks in which they are embedded</li> <li>Examines attachment issues between adoptive parent and child</li> </ul> <p>Providing a framework for therapists to conceptualize their work with adoptive parents, <i>Working with Adoptive Parents</i> clarifies and facilitates the journey that many of these families face.</p>
<p>Foreword xi</p> <p>Preface xiii</p> <p>Acknowledgments xxi</p> <p>About the Editors xxiii</p> <p>Contributors xxv</p> <p><b>Chapter 1 Setting the Stage: The Adoptive Parent in Context 1</b><br /><i>Virginia M. Brabender and April E. Fallon</i></p> <p>Characteristics of Adoptive Parents 2</p> <p>Serving the Needs of Adoptive Parents 5</p> <p>History of Adoption 8</p> <p>Contemporary Controversies 16</p> <p>Practical Points 20</p> <p>Conclusions 21</p> <p><b>Chapter 2 Theoretical Contributions to the Understanding of Parent-Child Bonding in Adoption 23</b><br /><i>April E. Fallon and Barbara L. Goldsmith</i></p> <p>Before the Family Becomes a Unit: Daniel Stern and Intrapsychic Reorganization 23</p> <p>The Case of Dora 25</p> <p>Bowlby and the Importance of Secure Attachment in Healthy Development 26</p> <p>The Parallel Caregiving System: Contributions of George and Solomon 28</p> <p>Ego Psychology and the Significance of Adaptation 32</p> <p>Contributions of D. W. Winnicott 33</p> <p>Kohut and the Development of Self-Esteem 37</p> <p>Mentalization: Holding the Adopted Child in Mind 38</p> <p>Separation-Individuation and the Contributions of Margaret Mahler 41</p> <p>Practical Points 43</p> <p>Conclusions 44</p> <p><b>Chapter 3 Using Research to Inform Best Practices in Working With Adoptive Families 45</b><br /><i>Hal S. Shorey, Sanjay R. Nath, and Meridith Carter</i></p> <p>The History of Research on Attachment and Parent-Child Interactions 46</p> <p>Research on Adoption 50</p> <p>Attachment-Based Interventions for Use in Adoption 56</p> <p>The Circle of Security 57</p> <p>Practical Points 59</p> <p>Conclusion 59</p> <p><b>Chapter 4 The Adoptive Mother 61</b><br /><i>Virginia M. Brabender, Amanda Swartz, Mary Winzinger, and April E. Fallon</i></p> <p>The Eras of Adoptive Motherhood 61</p> <p>Adolescence 80</p> <p>Practical Points 84</p> <p>Conclusion 85</p> <p><b>Chapter 5 The Adoptive Father 87</b><br /><i>Rao Gogineni and April E. Fallon</i></p> <p>Important Role Functions of the Father 87</p> <p>Becoming and Being an Adoptive Father 92</p> <p>Practical Points 103</p> <p>Conclusion 104</p> <p><b>Chapter 6 Recognizing Diversity in Adoptive Families 105</b><br /><i>Virginia M. Brabender, April E. Fallon, Alicia Padovano, and Phil Rutter</i></p> <p>Identity Variables Within the Addressing Framework 106</p> <p>Family Structure 125</p> <p>Practical Points 127</p> <p>Conclusion 127</p> <p><b>Chapter 7 Adoption of Children With Special Health Care Needs 131</b><br /><i>S. Ileana Lindstrom, Sonia Voynow, and Bret A. Boyer</i></p> <p>Three Approach Classes 132</p> <p>Comparison to Children in the General Population 134</p> <p>Disruption of Adoption for Children With SHCN 134</p> <p>Who Are the Families Who Adopt These Children? 135</p> <p>Commitment 135</p> <p>Preparation 137</p> <p>Coping and Stress 140</p> <p>Existential Issues 142</p> <p>Posttraumatic Stress 142</p> <p>Ambiguous Loss 143</p> <p>Posttraumatic Growth 144</p> <p>Marital Satisfaction 145</p> <p>Practical Points 145</p> <p>Conclusion 147</p> <p><b>Chapter 8 Parenting the Young Child 149</b><br /><i>Elaine Frank and Denise Rowe</i></p> <p>Ghosts in Adoptive Families 149</p> <p>Intervention With Adoptive Families: Developmental Guidance, Parent-Child Groups, and Parent-Child Therapy 153</p> <p>Parenting Cornerstones for Adoptive Families 156</p> <p>Enhancing the Parent-Child Relationship in Adoptive Families: Developing an Adoption Dialogue 163</p> <p>Practical Points 168</p> <p>Conclusion 168</p> <p><b>Chapter 9 Adoptive Parenting of Teenagers and Young Adults 169</b><br /><i>Joseph White</i></p> <p>Developmental Themes of Adolescence and Early Adulthood 169</p> <p>Individuation, Independence, and the Adoptive Parent-Child Relationship 172</p> <p>Insights for Parents and Therapists 174</p> <p>Identity Formation in International, Transcultural, and Transracial Adoptees 177</p> <p>Practical Points 180</p> <p>Conclusions 180</p> <p><b>Chapter 10 Therapeutic Interventions With Adopted Children and Adoptive Parents: A Psychoanalytic Developmental Approach 181</b><br /><i>Theodore Fallon Jr.</i></p> <p>Introduction 181</p> <p>Development of the Human Mind 181</p> <p>Therapeutic Intervention in a Psychoanalytic Developmental Approach 182</p> <p>Parent Problems and Child Problems in the Context of a Psychoanalytic Developmental Approach 182</p> <p>Intergenerational Transmission of the Human Mind—The Missing Link 184</p> <p>Evaluating the Parent-Child Dyad 185</p> <p>Practical Points 194</p> <p>Conclusion 194</p> <p><b>Chapter 11 Adoptive Parent as Consultant, Educator, and Advocator 195</b><br /><i>Virginia M. Brabender and Toni Whitmore</i></p> <p>The Roots of Problems Facing Adoptive Parents 197</p> <p>Action Implications 200</p> <p>Practical Points 210</p> <p>Conclusions 211</p> <p><b>Chapter 12 Meeting the Needs of Adoptive Parents: Practice, Training, and Research 213</b><br /><i>Patricia G. Ramsey, Virginia M. Brabender, and April E. Fallon</i></p> <p>Practice 213</p> <p>Training 223</p> <p>Research 228</p> <p>Practical Points 231</p> <p>Conclusions 231</p> <p>References 233</p> <p>Author Index 271</p> <p>Subject Index 281</p>
<p><b>VIRGINIA M. BRABENDER, PhD,</b> diplomate in clinical psychology (ABPP) and APA Fellow, is a professor at the Institute for Graduate Clinical Psychology at Widener University. She is the past president of the Society for Personality Assessment.</p> <p><b>APRIL E. FALLON, PhD,</b> is a member of the psychology faculty at Fielding Graduate University and an associate professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Drexel University College of Medicine. She has received numerous awards for her teaching of psychiatric medical residents and was awarded the 2012 Psychiatric Educator Award by the Philadelphia Psychiatric Society.</p>
<p><b>Practical techniques for guiding parents through the stages of adoption and beyond</b></p> <p>"This book makes a significant contribution to both a greater understanding of adoption and its complex dynamic constellations as well as to serving those who are or come across adoption families, many of whom count on us adoption-informed mental health professionals to clarify and facilitate the challenges they face."<br />—<b>From the Foreword by Henri Parens, MD, Professor of Psychiatry, Thomas Jefferson University, Training and Supervising Analyst, Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia</b></p> <p>"What most people don't know about adoption could fill a book—and this is the book. Finally sorting myth from science, <i>Working with Adoptive Parents</i> will give therapists, and quite a few nonprofessionals considering adoption, the real story of what it means to make this momentous choice. Better yet, it does so without letting the data speak in place of the parents themselves, in all their fear, doubt, and joy."<br />—<b>Jesse Green, author of <i>The Velveteen Father: An Unexpected Journey to Parenthood</i></b></p> <p>Editors Virginia Brabender and April Fallon are clinical psychologists and also adoptive parents whose families are acquainted with both the uncertainty and joy of adoption. In <i>Working with Adoptive Parents</i>, they offer an in-depth treatment of the distinctive needs, feelings, impulses, expectations, and conflicts that adoptive parents experience through the stages of adoption and beyond. This volume offers a comprehensive picture of adoption through an exploration of the experiences and developmental processes of the adoptive parent.</p> <p>Featuring contributions from mental health professionals whose careers have focused on work with families through the adoption process, this unique book:</p> <ul> <li>Covers the theory, research, and practice of adoptive parenting throughout the life cycle</li> <li>Explores the issues unique to the adoptive mother and adoptive father as they traverse the stages of parenting</li> <li>Offers a close look at families with special needs children</li> <li>Acknowledges and explores the great diversity among adoptive families and the kinship networks in which they are embedded</li> <li>Examines attachment issues between adoptive parent and child</li> </ul> <p>Providing a framework for therapists to conceptualize their work with adoptive parents, <i>Working with Adoptive Parents</i> clarifies and facilitates the journey that many of these families face.</p>
"This book makes a significant contribution to both a greater understanding of adoption and its complex dynamic constellations as well as to serving those who are or come across adoption families, many of whom count on us adoption-informed mental health professionals to clarify and facilitate the challenges they face."<br /> —<b>From the Foreword by Henri Parens</b>, MD, Professor of Psychiatry, Thomas Jefferson University, Training & Supervising Analyst, Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia <p>"What most people don't know about adoption could fill a book – and this is the book. Finally sorting myth from science, Working with Adoptive Parents will give therapists, and quite a few nonprofessionals considering adoption, the real story of what it means to make this momentous choice. Better yet, it does so without letting the data speak in place of the parents themselves, in all their fear, doubt, and joy."<br /> —<b>Jesse Green</b>, author of <i>The Velveteen Father: An Unexpected Journey to Parenthood</i></p> <p>"With adoption, including those that across international boundaries, on the rise, the salutary impact of human kindness as well the tragic potential for developmental complications has greatly increased. Brabender and Fallon, the editors of this well-organized volume, are keenly aware of this. They have cast their net wide and brought together the perspectives of attachment theory, empirical research, and clinical experiences to deepen our understanding of the challenges faced by adoptive parents. Conceptually rich and yet unabashedly pragmatic, their book addresses the issues of parent-child bonding, the subjective dilemmas of adoptive mothers, the role of adoptive fathers, and parenting children with special health care needs. Attention is also given to the specific tasks involving the adoption of very young children as well as to the resurgence of difficulties during adopted children's adolescence. This wide-ranging discourse consistently maintains a tone of respect, concern, and shared humanity of all of us. A most impressive contribution to the adoption literature indeed!"<br /> —<b>Salman Akhtar</b>, MD, Professor of Psychiatry, Jefferson Medical College, Training and Supervising Analyst, Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia</p> <p>"This book is a tour de force, a must read for all involved in the world of adoption.  A comprehensive history of adoption, including current controversies, sets the stage. Every chapter is a gem, but contributions on research to inform best practices, the role of the adoptive father, diversity, and adoption of children with special health care needs, help fill significant gaps in the adoption literature. Rich clinical material and the practical points summarized throughout, demonstrate the wisdom of seasoned practitioners."<br /> —<b>Jennifer Bonovitz</b>, PhD, Supervising and Training Analyst, Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia</p> <p>"This volume is a major contribution to our understanding of adoptive parenting. The book is thorough, full of helpful insights, case studies, and perspectives on the complicated dance involved for adoptive parents and their children. The portrait of adoptive parenting is both hopeful and realistic, and is framed with thoughtful attention to what we actually know from careful research. This book should be a helpful guide and resource for both mental health professionals and adoptive parents."<br /> —<b>Sam Osherson</b>, PhD, Professor of Psychology, Fielding Graduate University, Cambridge, MA</p>

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