“This remarkable volume…is both conceptually robust and highly practical…The book promises to heighten awareness among clinicians around the world about the diagnostic and therapeutic importance of family relationships in human health and disease. It also will serve as a roadmap for the critically important work that lies ahead.”
—David G. Addiss
Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership
Kalamazoo, MI
Family problems and family violence are major global concerns that have a vast impact on both psychological and physical health, and economic well-being. This text, the only book of its kind, describes recent innovations in defining and assessing family problems and family violence. It provides a framework for improving global assessment of relational processes as addressed in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11).
The book includes a complete set of practical clinical and public health tools—easily implemented across a wide range of setting—for defining, screening, and assessing family violence in accordance with these new definitions. It reviews the impact of family violence on all aspects of physical and mental health and economic well-being, including global considerations of cross-cultural relationship assessment, and provides recommendations for modifications and cross-cultural validation. The book is consistently organized for ease of use and consolidates ICD codes into four scientifically based categories: intimate partner violence, partner relationship distress, child maltreatment, and parent-child relation problems. Clinicians who assess and treat family violence and students and policymakers will benefit from several new state-of-the-art screening tools and structured interviews that can be easily administered in hospitals, clinics, and other health care settings. This text will also be an important addition to graduate training programs across many disciplines regarding the assessment of family maltreatment, parent-child problems, and relationship discord.
Key Features:
- Contains a wealth of current validated screening and interview tools that can be used in clinical or research settings
- Provides a global perspective on assessing and treating family violence
- Provides recommendations for surveillance of family problems and family violence addressed in the ICD-11
- Highlights the implications of relational problems for mental and physical health and economic well-being in a global context
Spis treści
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Contributors
Foreword Preface
Acknowledgments
I: PARTNER MALTREATMENT
1. Intimate Partner Maltreatment: Definitions, Prevalence, and Implications for Diagnosis
2. Intimate Partner Violence and Its Measurement: Global Considerations
3. Psychological, Physical, and Economic Consequences of Intimate Partner Violence
4. Practical Tools for Assessing Partner Maltreatment in Clinical Practice and Public Health Settings
II: PARTNER RELATIONAL PROBLEMS
5. Relationship Distress: Assessment, Definition, and Implications for Mental Health Diagnosis
6. Defining Partner Relational Problems in the Arab Region
7. Relationship Distress: Impact on Mental Illness, Physical Health, Children, and Family Economics
8. Practical Tools for Assessing Marital or Intimate Partner Relational Problems in Clinical Practice and Public Health Settings
III: CHILD MALTREATMENT
9. Child Maltreatment: Definitions, Prevalence, and Implications for Diagnosis
10. Child Maltreatment Relational Diagnosis Using ICD Codes: Considerations for Low- and Middle-Income Settings
11. Psychological, Physical, and Economic Consequences of
Child Maltreatment
12. Practical Tools for Assessing Child Maltreatment in Clinical Practice and Public Health Settings
IV: CAREGIVERñCHILD RELATIONAL PROBLEMS
13. CaregiverñChild Relational Problems: Definitions and Implications for Diagnosis
14. Applicability, Generalizability, and Considerations in China
15. ParentñChild Relational Problems: The Psychological, Physical, and Economic Consequences
16. Practical Tools for Assessing CaregiverñChild Relationship Problems
V: CURRENT STATE OF PUBLIC HEALTH RESPONSE AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
17. Prevention and Reduction of ParentñChild Relationship Difficulties
18. Current State of the Global Public Health Response to Child Maltreatment and Intimate Partner Violence
19. Relational Problems Co-Occurring With Medical Problems: The Conceptual Basis of Cross-Coding
20. Future Directions for Science and Public Health
Index
’O autorze
Marianne Wamboldt, MD is Professor and Vice Chair of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, as well as Chair of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Children’s Hospital Colorado.