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E-raamat: Innovative Approaches to Individual and Community Resilience: From Theory to Practice

(Private Practice, Neuropsychology Center of Louisiana, LLC, USA), (Department of Psychology, St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital, Memphis, TN, USA)
  • Formaat: 198 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Academic Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780128039137
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  • Formaat: 198 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Academic Press Inc
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780128039137

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Resilience is a biopsychosocial phenomenon-it encompasses personal, interpersonal, and community experiences. Innovative Approaches to Individual and Community Resilience reviews the current research and details differing levels and approaches to resilience. On a microlevel, this book specifies how to develop appropriate coping strategies, maintain cognitive flexibility, and identify, label, and share feelings before acting upon them. On a macrolevel, it defines and explores environmental resilience, social resilience, community resilience, and family resilience. It focuses on the importance of family, community, and spiritual bonds, in order to share experiences and enhance posttraumatic healing. The need to be firmly grounded in today, while learning from yesterday, in order to cope with the requirements of tomorrow is the primary emphasis of this book.

  • Explores aspects of resilience within the individual, community, and environment
  • Outlines critical factors that allow people to not just survive, but to thrive
  • Addresses the crucial role of the family in the development of resilience
  • Reflects upon the helping professional's need to achieve and maintain resilience
List of Figures
xi
List of Tables
xiii
About the Authors xv
Preface xix
Acknowledgments xxi
Prologue xxvii
1 Resilience: Defined and Explored
1(24)
Resilience Can Be Taught
2(1)
Four Types of People
2(1)
Multiple Perspectives
3(4)
Four Needed Community Interventions
7(1)
Adversity and Adjustment
7(1)
Attachment and Resilience
8(1)
Artificial Attachment
9(1)
Connectedness and Resilience
10(1)
Recognizing, Labeling, and Sharing Feelings
11(1)
Reclaiming Relatedness
11(1)
A False Sense of Resilience
12(1)
A Developmental Model of Resilience
13(1)
Humanization and Resilience
14(2)
Resilience in the Workplace
16(1)
Resilience for the Homeplace
17(1)
Teaching Resilience Rather Than Aggression
18(1)
Thoughts of Resilience, Culture, and Structure
18(1)
Developing Definitions of Resilience
19(1)
References
20(5)
2 Resilience: Researched and Evaluated
25(10)
Resilience and Adaptivity
26(1)
Competence Can Be Learned
27(1)
The Effects of Childhood Experiences
28(1)
How Can These Qualities Be Measured?
28(3)
The Katrina 10 Wellness Workshops
31(1)
Future Directions
31(1)
References
32(3)
3 Family Resilience: Coping With the Unexpected
35(24)
Physical, Emotional, and Spiritual Distress
36(1)
The Emotional Impact of Major Stressors
37(1)
A Developmental Approach to Resilience
37(2)
Environmental Trauma
39(5)
Economic Disturbance
44(1)
Medical and Mental Health Trauma
45(7)
The Critical Need for Family Therapy
52(4)
References
56(3)
4 Community Resilience: Baton Rouge---A Community in Crisis---Grieving and Moving Forward
59(18)
A Local Tragedy
60(1)
Pets, Pictures, and Proof
61(1)
The Governor and the Media
61(1)
Resilience: A New Household Word
62(1)
Spin and Fraud
62(1)
It Should Not Be This Hard
62(1)
A Double Bind
62(1)
The Plight of the Seniors
63(1)
No Place to Go
63(1)
The Need for Emotional Intervention
63(1)
The Intervention Committee
64(2)
Informed Consent and Confidentiality
66(1)
Research
66(1)
Feelings
66(3)
RILEE Bear to the Rescue
69(2)
A Morning Break
71(2)
Effectiveness
73(1)
A Cultural Blend
74(1)
Sharing a Meal
74(1)
Goodbye
74(1)
Post Script
75(1)
References
75(2)
5 Environmental Resilience
77(12)
Ideology as Fact
78(1)
Rains and Floods
78(1)
Tornados
79(1)
Hurricanes
79(1)
Environmental Injury
79(1)
Droughts
80(1)
Reaction Versus Proaction
80(1)
From Macro Management to Micro Management
81(1)
A "High-Risk" State
82(1)
Finding Solutions and Compromises
82(1)
Entitlement Is Our Enemy
83(1)
Success Versus Safety
84(1)
Rebuilding
85(1)
Natural Systems Will Prevail
86(1)
Sick Environment = Sick People
86(1)
References
86(3)
6 Achieving and Maintaining Individual Resilience
89(16)
Why Stay?
90(1)
Psychosocial Development
91(1)
Stage 1 Attachment
91(3)
Stage 2 Exploration
94(1)
Stage 3 Identity
94(1)
Stage 4 Competence
95(1)
Stage 5 Concern
95(1)
Stage 6 Intimacy
96(1)
Maintaining Resilience
97(1)
Regression in Service of the Ego
98(1)
The Role of Spirituality
98(1)
The Effects of Developmental Trauma on Resiliency
99(2)
Children Know
101(1)
Rebuilding Resiliency
102(1)
References
103(2)
7 Becoming a Resilient Clinician
105(18)
Seasoning Makes Everything Better
107(1)
Reflections From a Seasoned Professional
107(1)
Appearances Are Important
108(1)
Be Attuned to Your Inner Life
108(1)
"Thanks, But No Thanks"
109(1)
Rest
110(1)
Defining Resiliency
111(1)
Today
111(2)
Yesterday
113(1)
Tomorrow
113(1)
Teaching Versus Relating
114(1)
Resilience Exemplified
115(4)
The Bottom Line
119(1)
The Power of Positivity
119(2)
In Summary
121(1)
References
121(2)
8 Promoting Resilience and Fostering Hope
123(16)
It All Starts in Childhood
124(1)
Joy Versus Happiness
125(1)
Hope Can Be Fostered
125(1)
Comfort Versus Distress
126(1)
Teaching Sequences
127(1)
The Goal of Child Development
128(1)
Managing Anxiety and Anger
128(1)
Anxiety Management
128(2)
Acceptance
130(1)
Self-Trust = Self Esteem
131(1)
Resilience and Emotional Balance
132(1)
Anger Management
133(1)
Igniting Anger
133(1)
10 Defensive Traits
134(1)
Angry Children Become Angry Adults
135(1)
Change Can Happen
135(1)
Kindness Can Help
135(1)
Fostering Hope
136(1)
Promoting Resilience
137(1)
References
137(2)
9 Teaching Resilience
139(16)
Research Matters
140(2)
Family Matters
142(2)
Beware of Ripple Effects
144(1)
Attitudes Matter
144(2)
Choice Matters
146(1)
To Teach or Not to Teach
146(1)
To Learn or Not to Learn
147(2)
A Smorgasbord of Choices
149(1)
Listening, Understanding, and Responding
149(1)
Spirituality Matters
150(1)
Teach the Cornerstones
150(1)
References
151(4)
10 Conclusions
155(4)
References
158(1)
Epilogue 159(2)
Index 161
Darlyne G. Nemeth, Ph.D., M.P., M.P.A.P., an accomplished clinical, medical, and neuropsychologist, has a broad-spectrum practice at the Neuropsychology Center of Louisiana (NCLA). Dr. Nemeth was among the first medical psychologists in Louisiana to obtain prescriptive authority. She is a fellow of the American Psychological Association (APA) and served on the APA Council of Representatives for two terms 2010-2016. Dr. Nemeth served as one of the World Council for Psychotherapys (WCP) United Nations (UN) Nongovernmental Organizations (NGO) Delegates for 10 years and was Vice President for the U.S. Chapter of WCP for 3 terms. She is currently serving as WCPs Co-Secretary General. As an expert in group dynamics, Dr. Nemeth has been nationally and internationally recognized for her Hurricane Anniversary Wellness Workshops, which were offered to the victims/survivors of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in the summer of 2006. The results of these workshops were presented at the 2013 Meeting of the American Group Psychotherapy Association (AGPA) in New Orleans, LA. Anniversary Wellness Workshop Training Programs were also conducted in China at the 2008 WCP Meeting and in Australia at the 2011 WCP Meeting. In August, 2014, Dr. Nemeth gave the Keynote Address on Psychological Leadership in the Event of Environmental Trauma at the WCP Meeting in Durban, South Africa. In, 2016, South Louisiana experienced a Great Flood causing thousands to be displaced. Emotional Resiliency Workshops were developed and conducted by Dr. Nemeth, who is also an Environmental Psychologist, to help children, adolescents, and adults coping with this major disaster. In March, 2003, Dr. Nemeth was the lead author on a book titled, Helping Your Angry Child published by New Harbinger. She served as the Lead Editor for the 2012 book, Living in an Environmentally Traumatized World: Healing Ourselves and Our Planet, published by ABC-CLIO/Praeger, and the 2015 anthology, Ecopsychology Advances from the Intersection of Psychology and Environmental Protection, also published by ABC-CLIO/Praeger. In 2012, she was the lead author on an anniversary wellness workshop article that was published in the International Journal of Group Psychotherapy (IJGP). Dr. Nemeth then published an article in 2013 in Ecopsychology on preparing individuals and communities for hurricane anniversary reactions. Dr. Nemeth served as Director of Neuropsychology at Sage Rehabilitation Hospital Outpatient Services for five years. While there, Dr. Nemeth developed a Hope Therapy Group Program for Brain-Injured Adults, which was presented at the 2013 AGPA meeting in New Orleans. She was also the lead author on an article outlining this process, which was published in IJGP in January, 2015. In 2016, Dr. Nemeth was invited to give two keynote addresses at the First Congress on Mental Health: Meeting the Needs of the XXI Century in Moscow, Russia: 1) Building Individual and Community Resilience in This Age of Depression and Environmental Trauma and 2) The Influence of Perception on Our Mental Health and Well-being. Subsequently, Dr. Nemeth has been invited to serve on the Organizing Committee for the Second World Congress on Mental Health in Moscow, Russia in 2018. Dr. Nemeth obtained a Bachelors degree from Indiana University in Music and Radio/Television Broadcasting, a Masters degree from Oklahoma State University in Higher Education: Student Personnel, a second Masters degree and a doctoral degree from Louisiana State University in Clinical Psychology, and a Post-Doctoral Masters degree from the California School of Professional Psychology in Clinical Psychopharmacology. Besides being active in the practice of clinical, medical, & neuropsychology, and psychopharmacological management, Dr. Nemeth has written chapters on the history of psychotherapy in the United States, anger management for children, and pediatric medical psychopharmacology. Dr. Nemeth serves as an externship advisor/mentor for future psychologists. For her outstanding efforts, Dr. Nemeth was given the 2010 Distinguished Psychologist award by the Louisiana Psychological Association (LPA). She currently serves on LPAs Executive Committee, and is a member of the American Group Psychotherapy Association (AGPA), where she has obtained recognition as a Certified Group Psychotherapist (CGP), the Louisiana Group Psychotherapy Society (LGPS), and the Louisiana Academy of Medical Psychologists (LAMP). Dr. Nemeth maintains membership in the International Neuropsychology Society and the National Academy of Neuropsychology. She has also served as a member and Vice Chair of the Louisiana State Board of Examiners of Psychologists. Her Web site is www.louisiananeuropsych.com. Traci W. Olivier, Psy.D. earned her doctorate in clinical psychology at Nova Southeastern University in 2016. After completing her internship at the Kennedy Krieger Institute and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in pediatric neuropsychology and consultation, she continued her training in pediatric neuropsychology as a postdoctoral clinical and research fellow at St. Jude Childrens Research Hospital (SJCRH) in Memphis, Tennessee. Throughout her training, she has worked extensively with Dr. Darlyne G. Nemeth at the Neuropsychology Center of Louisiana. Over the course of her graduate career, Dr. Olivier has obtained specialized training in neuropsychological evaluation and intervention with patients across the lifespan, and she has maintained an active role in research over the years. Dr. Oliviers particular interests surround pediatric deafness, neurocognitive late effects of cancer-directed treatment, and resiliency in children and adults. Dr. Olivier maintains active memberships in professional organizations and regularly presents at conferences such as the American Psychological Association, the International Neuropsychological Society, the National Academy of Neuropsychology, and the Louisiana Psychological Association. When she is not in the office, you can find Dr. Olivier spending time with her husband, Lawrence Olivier, II, MBA or with her fluffy little man,” Maison. If shes not with either of those two, shes likely in the kitchen trying out a new recipe.