Reviews best practices for engaging children and families in mental health treatment.
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Engaging Families in Child & Youth Mental Health: A Review of Best, Emerging and Promising Practices
Provides information for parents and caregivers on intrafamilial sexual abuse.
Describes work from McCormick Foundation, RAND Corporation, and Duke University's Veteran Culture and Clinical Competence (V3C) Program.
Explores the common reasons CSEC youth seek care, as well as challenges to victim identification.
Explores the relationship between physical abuse and socioeconomic status, religious beliefs, racial and/or ethnic backgrounds, and gender.
Provides parents information on how to talk to children about domestic violence. This fact sheet discusses how to manage challenging behavior in children living in domestic violence situations.
This parent-rating scale is used to assess both the frequency of child disruptive behaviors and the extent to which the parent finds the child’s behavior troublesome. It has been widely used in treatment outcome studies for disruptive disorders.
The BRIA is an adapted version of the Bell Object Relations and Reality Testing Inventory (BORRTI) that was developed for adolescents aged 11 to 17 and assesses for psychological disturbances and relationship problems.
The CASA is a rater-report measure designed to assess child/adolescent status with regard to 30 potential strengths, for use in mental health service planning and delivery.
NOTE: The user manual and technical report cost $125, MAYSIWARE (for electronic administration) costs $279.95.