Ten Minutes for the Family: Systemic Interventions in Primary Care

Cover
Psychology Press, 2004 - 203 Seiten

The provision of suitable mental health care is one of the major tasks facing general practitioners and their teams. Family-oriented primary care has moved from doctor-controlled to patient-centred consultations, with a greater emphasis on collaboration. The systemic framework uniquely lends itself to this shift in emphasis, as it views the delivery of care in social rather than merely medical terms. There is now a strong evidence base for the efficacy of systemic approaches in managing many different types of mental health and relationship issues.

This text is a practical guide for health professionals working in primary care who wish to improve their management of problem patients, problem families and problem situations. Step-by-step, it introduces both the theory and the practice of the family approach - from interviewing individual patients in routine consultations to conducting specific family crisis meetings. It includes many concrete suggestions for using simple family therapy techniques and encourages the clinician to think about cases constructively. Case histories and patient stories are used extensively to illustrate the techniques as well as boxed information to highlight key points.

 

Inhalt

SYSTEMIC PRACTICE IN A CHANGING WORLD
1
INGREDIENTS OF THE SYSTEMIC APPROACH
29
QUESTIONING AND REFLECTING ON THE AGENDA
45
THE FAMILY WITHIN US GENOGRAMS
64
NOT GOING ROUND IN CIRCLES
78
FAMILY TRANSITIONS
93
ASSESSING REFLECTING AND CONNECTING
103
WORKING WITH COUPLES
123
DANCING WITH THE FAMILY
143
THE FAMILY IN CRISIS
160
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Autoren-Profil (2004)

Eia Asen is Clinical Director and Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist at the Marlborough Family Service. He is also a family therapist of international renown. Dave Tomson is a GP on Tyneside with a background in family work, education, learning and service development. He has had lecturer posts at both local universities and is now a freelance consultant in the development of patient centred primary care. Venetis Young is a GP in Penrith, Cumbria and a Family Therapists at the Psychotherapy department in Carlisle. As GP Mental Health Lead for Eden Valley PCT she is involved in service redesign and mental health training for primary care and community staff. Peter Tomson is a retired GP, previously Honorary Senior Lecturer at St. Bartholomew's Hospital, a member of one of Michael Balint's original groups and a pioneer of introducing systemic practices into primary care.

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