Presents an innovative family-based approach to rehabilitation counseling that can be put to use immediately!
While the family has traditionally been a secondary consideration in rehabilitation, this graduate text presents an innovative approach to rehabilitation counseling that focuses on the family as the center of a person-centered model, rather than as an adjunct to individual counseling. It advocates counseling in the context of community, requiring the recognition of social transaction as the primary focus of all interventions. The book provides the tools and knowledge base to effectively work with the family and within the community, delivering a new inclusive model of care and establishing best practices in research, practice, training, and management.
The text examines the rationale for embracing family values in rehabilitation counseling and provides a framework that redefines the relationship between counselor and client in the context of family and community. It describes the community-based rehabilitation model in detail according to the International Classification of Function (ICF) and presents a series of illustrative disability profiles—distilled from systematic reviews of the literature—reflecting this framework. In each case, the impact upon family participation is illustrated and optimal service and support resources are identified. The role and function of the rehabilitation counselor provide the integrative conclusion to each chapter. The book also describes grassroots initiatives, the role of family in community-based rehabilitation in developing countries, family policy across rehabilitation systems, and best practices in research, training, and management. Additionally, the text comes with access to an Instructor‘s Manual that includes case study discussion questions, classroom activities, and multiple-choice questions.
Key Features:
• Describes an innovative family-/community-focused approach to rehabilitation counseling, framed in ICF taxonomy
• Presents a pragmatic model that can be put to use immediately
• Describes an array of family experiences across disability contexts, providing an opportunity to critique current practice through the lens of community-based constructs
• Provides plentiful case studies based on family narratives
• Broadens the scope of practice with service initiatives from around the world
• Includes an Instructor‘s Manual with case study discussion questions, classroom activities, and multiple-choice questions
Tabela de Conteúdo
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Contents
Contributors
Foreword by Arthur Dell Orto, Ph D
Preface
Acknowledgments
PART I. A COMMUNITY-BASED APPROACH
1. Finding the Family in Rehabilitation Counseling
Michael J. Millington, Benjamin C. Jenkins, and R. Rocco Cottone
2. Counseling in the Context of Family Identity
Michael J. Millington and Rosamond H. Madden
3. Counseling in the Context of Family Empowerment
Terri Lewis, Michael J. Millington, and Irmo Marini
4. Rehabilitation Counseling in the Context of Family Capital
Sue Lukersmith, Charlotte Scarf, and Michael J. Millington
5. Family Care and Support
Michael J. Millington and Irmo Marini
PART II. FAMILY EXPERIENCE OF DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION
6. Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Cheryl Hanley-Maxwell, Nancy Molfenter, and Kristin Maxwell
7. Recovery, Families, and Psychiatric Disabilities
Lynda R. Matthews, Marianne Farkas, Michelle Medway, and Natalie Taylor
8. Brain Injury and the Family: A Guide for Rehabilitation Counselors
Charles Edmund Degeneffe and Gloria K. Lee
9. The Family Role in Progressive Illness
Michael Frain, Malachy Bishop, Judy Frain, Julianne Frain, Tim Tansey, and Molly K. Tschopp
10. Family and Spinal Cord Injury
Irmo Marini and Alicia D. Brown
11. Families of Veterans With Polytrauma Injuries in the United States: A Guide for Rehabilitation Counseling Practice
Charles Edmund Degeneffe, Mark Tucker, and Joan M. Griffin
PART III. SELECTED ISSUES FOR COMMUNITY-BASED REHABILITATION COUNSELING
12. Cultural Perspectives on Family Attitudes Toward Disability
Michael J. Millington
13. Family Assessments in Rehabilitation Service Provision
Elias Mpofu, Lisa Lopez Levers, Kumbirai Mpofu, Philomena Tanui, and Zakia S. Hossain
14. Managing the Rehabilitation Environment Around Families
Terri Lewis
15. Reflection on the Field
Irmo Marini and Michael J. Millington
Index
‘Sobre o autor
Michael J. Millington, Ph D is Course Director for the Rehabilitation Counselling Discipline and Associate of the Centre for Disability Research and Policy, and the WHO Collaborating Centre at the Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Sydney.