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How can web-based training facilitate a more carer friendly practice in community-based health and social care services in Norway? Staff experiences and implementation challenges

Hanssen, H. Norheim, A. Hanson, E. (2017)

It is a central feature of current Norwegian health and social care policy to see informal carers as active partners. However, research has revealed that carers often experience a lack of recognition by professionals. In 2010, the Norwegian Directorate of Health initiated a web-based competence-building programme (CBP) for health and social care practitioners aimed at facilitating collaboration with carers. The programme comprised case presentations, e-lectures, exercises and topics for discussion, and was introduced in 2012. It was flexible and free of charge. This article is based on a study (2012-2013) that followed the piloting of this CBP in four settings. The study aimed to explore factors that influenced the implementation of the programme and whether or not using it affected health and social care practitioners' attitudes and perceived capacity for collaboration with carers. The study employed a mixed-methods design. A questionnaire was distributed to all staff before and 5 months after the CBP was introduced, followed by focus group interviews with a sample of staff members and individual interviews with the leadership in the involved settings and those who introduced the programme. The quantitative data were analysed using descriptive statistics, which subsequently formed the basis for the focus group interviews. The qualitative data were analysed by means of content analysis. The programme's introduction was similar across all research settings. Nevertheless, whether or not it was adopted depended to a large extent on leadership commitment and engagement. In settings where the programme's use was monitored, supported by management and formed part of on-the-job training, there seemed to be a positive impact on staff attitudes concerning collaboration with carers. Participant staff reported that their awareness of, motivation for and confidence in collaboration with carers were all strengthened. In contrast, the programme was of minimal benefit in settings with low leadership engagement.

How children cope with mother's breast cancer

Issel LM, Ersek M, Lewis FM. (1990)

Few studies have focused on the child of a parent with cancer. Family systems and cognitive development theories suggest that the mother's illness affects the children and that families take action to help them. This study describes the ways in which school-age children cope with the mother's breast cancer and the ways in which their families help them cope. The results are based on semistructured interviews with 81 children 6-20 years old whose mothers had been diagnosed with breast cancer within the past two-and-a-half years. Interviews were tape-recorded, transcribed, and content analyzed. Eighty-four percent agreement on interrater reliability was achieved using three independent trained coders. Children and families used four types of strategies: acted as though they were in her shoes, carried on business as usual, tapped into group energy, and put her illness on the table. Parents, other family members, the children's friends, and adult friends helped the children. The results suggest ways that clinicians can understand the effect of the mother's breast cancer from the child's perspective and thus facilitate both the child's coping and the family's attempts to help the children.

Family Obligations and Social Change

Finch, J. (1989)

Finch discusses the nature of family life, especially concepts of duty, responsibility and obligation and how these factors operate in family and kin relationships.

Family preservation and family support programs: child maltreatment outcomes across client risk levels and program types.

Chaffin M, Bonner BL, Hill RF. (2001)

OBJECTIVES:
This study evaluated client-level outcomes among an entire statewide group of Family Preservation and Family Support (FPFS) programs funded under PL 103-66.
METHOD:
A total of 1,601 clients (primarily low income, moderate to high risk with no current involvement in the child protection system) were assessed and followed over time for future child maltreatment events reported to Child Protective Services. The study compared program completers with program dropouts, compared recipients of more lengthy full-service programs with recipients of one-time services, and examined the effects of program duration, intensity, service site (center-based vs. home based) and service model/content. Effects were modeled using survival analysis and variable-exposure Poisson hierarchical models, controlling for initial client risk levels and removing failure events because of surveillance bias. Changes in lifestyle, economic and risk factors were also examined.
RESULTS:
A total of 198 (12.2%) participants had at least one defined failure event over a median follow-up period of 1.6 years. Controlling for risk and receipt of outside services, program completers did not differ from program dropouts or from recipients of one-time services, and there was no relationship between program intensity or duration and outcomes. Program types designed to help families meet basic concrete needs and programs using mentoring approaches were found to be more effective than parenting and child development oriented programming, and center-based services were found to be more effective than home-based services, especially among higher risk parents.
CONCLUSIONS:
The findings did not support the effectiveness of these services in preventing future maltreatment cases, and raised questions about a number of common family support assumptions regarding the superiority of home-visiting based and parent training services. A number of possible reasons for this are explored.

Family Support and Empowerment: Post Autism Diagnosis Support Group for Parents

Banach, M., J. Iudice, et al. (2010)

Receiving a diagnosis of an autism spectrum disorder often elicits strong emotional reactions from parents of the diagnosed child. Follow-up services and continued support for these families is a necessary component to help families adapt and meet their and their children's needs. This pilot study measured the effects of a six-session, co-facilitated, support group on the advocacy skills and self-efficacy of parents coping with a child's diagnosis. Statistically significant increases in the average mean scores for the three subscales of the Family Empowerment Scale were found. Implications for practice and research are discussed. Adapted from the source document.

Family support for stroke: a randomised controlled trial.

Mant J, Carter J, Wade DT, Winner S. (2000)

Background

Attention is currently focused on family care of stroke survivors, but the effectiveness of support services is unclear. We did a single-blind, randomised, controlled trial to assess the impact of family support on stroke patients and their carers.

Methods

Patients with acute stroke admitted to hospitals in Oxford, UK, were assigned family support or normal care within 6 weeks of stroke. After 6 months, we assessed, for carers, knowledge about stroke, Frenchay activities index, general health questionnaire-28 scores, caregiver strain index, Dartmouth co-op charts, short form 36 (SF-36), and satisfaction scores, and, for patients, knowledge about stroke and use of services, Barthel index, Rivermead mobility index, Frenchay activities index, London handicap scale, hospital anxiety and depression scales, Dartmouth co-op charts, and satisfaction.

Findings

323 patients and 267 carers were followed up. Carers in the intervention group had significantly better Frenchay activities indices (p=0·03), SF-36 scores (energy p=0·02, mental health p=0·004, pain p=0·03, physical function p=0·025, and general health perception p=0·02), quality of life on the Dartmouth co-op chart (p=0·01), and satisfaction with understanding of stroke (82 vs 71%, p=0·04) than those in the control group. Patients' knowledge about stroke, disability, handicap, quality of life, and satisfaction with services and understanding of stroke did not differ between groups. Fewer patients in the intervention group than in the control group saw a physiotherapist after discharge (44 vs 56%, p=0·04), but use of other services was similar.

Interpretation

Family support significantly increased social activities and improved quality of life for carers, with no significant effects on patients.

Family support for stroke: one year follow up of a randomised controlled trial.

Mant J, Winner S, Roche J, Wade DT. (2005)

BACKGROUND:
There is evidence that family support can benefit carers of stroke patients, but not the patients themselves.
OBJECTIVE:
To extend the follow up of a single blind randomised controlled trial of family support for stroke patients and carers to one year to ascertain whether there were any late effects of the intervention.
METHODS:
The study was a randomised controlled trial. Patients admitted to hospital with acute stroke who had a close carer were assigned to receive family support or normal care. Families were visited at home by a researcher 12 months after the stroke, and a series of questionnaires was administered to patient and carer.
RESULTS:
The benefits to carers mostly persisted, though they were no longer statistically significant because some patients were lost to follow up. There was no evidence of any effects on patients.
CONCLUSION:
Family support is effective for carers, but different approaches need to be considered to alleviate the psychosocial problems of stroke patients.

Family supports and services in early intervention: A bold vision.

Turnbull AP, Summers JA, Turnbull R, Brotherson MJ, Winton P, Roberts R, et al. (2007)

This article utilizes four knowledge sources to characterize a current gap in policy and practice related to serving families in early intervention (birth to 5) programs. It argues that the field of early intervention has focused primarily on implementing family-centered practices by focusing on how families and professionals should interact. The field has not sufficiently addressed what supports and services should be offered to families to enhance the likelihood of positive outcomes for families themselves and for their children with disabilities. The paper concludes with recommendations for enhancing policy, research, and professional development related to family services and supports.

Family therapy techniques

Minuchin, S. and H. C. Fishman (1981)

A master of family therapy, Salvador Minuchin, traces for the first time the minute operations of day-to-day practice. Dr. Minuchin has achieved renown for his theoretical breakthroughs and his success at treatment. Now he explains in close detail those precise and difficult maneuvers that constitute his art. The book thus codifies the method of one of the country's most successful practitioners.

Family Treatment Approaches for Depression in Adolescent Males

Pruitt, I. T. P. (2006)

Adolescent depression is a serious and common disorder. Though adolescent males are less likely to report depression than females, they have serious risks associated with the disorder, like suicide, future substance abuse, and illegal activity. Several gender differences have been observed among depressed adolescents and should be considered in assessment and treatment. Little efficacy research exists for family treatments of depression in adolescent males, though several approaches have been proposed. These approaches include Structural Family Therapy, Interpersonal Family Therapy, and Attachment-Based Family Therapy. These treatments have been found useful in clinical settings, but much more efficacy research is necessary. Adapted from the source document.

Family-Based Interventions for Substance Use and Misuse Prevention

Kumpfer KL, Alvarado R, Whiteside HO. (2003)

Because "substance abuse" is a "family disease" of lifestyle, including both genetic and family environmental causes, effective family strengthening prevention programs should be included in all comprehensive substance abuse prevention activities. This article presents reviews of causal models of substance use and evidence-based practices. National searches by the authors suggest that there is sufficient research evidence to support broad dissemination of five highly effective family strengthening approaches (e.g., behavioral parent training, family skills training, in-home family support, brief family therapy, and family education). Additionally, family approaches have average effect sizes two to nine time larger than child-only prevention approaches. Comprehensive prevention programs combining both approaches produced much larger effect sizes. The Strengthening Families Program (SFP) is the only one of these programs that has been replicated with positive results by independent researchers with different cultural groups and with different ages of children. Few research-based programs have been adopted by practitioners, partly because of technology transfer issues. Overall, research on ways to improve dissemination, marketing, training, and funding is needed to improve adoption of effective prevention programs.

Family-centeredness in service and rehabilitation planning for children and youth with cerebral palsy in Finland

Jeglinsky, I. (2012)

Objectives: The overall aim of this thesis was to explore and describe the familycentredness and rehabilitation planning procedure for children and youth with cerebral palsy (CP) in Finland. The main focus was on how professionals working with children and youth with cerebral palsy describe and document the rehabilitation planning procedure and how family-centredness was perceived by professionals and parents.

Methods: Participants were team members in neuropediatric multidisciplinary teams in central and university hospitals and government special schools as well as physiotherapy private practitioners who had an agreement with the Social Insurance Institution. Parents visiting two university hospital neuropediatric wards participated in one study (II). Family-centredness in services (FCS) was evaluated by the Measure of Processes of Care questionnaires. To get a deeper insight in the rehabilitation planning procedure, focus group interviews were conducted. Two researchers conducted the interviews which were tape recorded and transcribed. Three content areas guided the interviews: goal-setting, different transition phases and the use of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health, Children and Youth version. A retrospective cross-sectional register study was used to analyze the interrelation between needs and functional difficulties and the therapeutic goals in written rehabilitation plans. The ICF-CY was used as a reference in the analysis.

Results: Professionals and parents rated the family-centred service as fair to moderate. There was a significant difference in how professionals of different disciplines rated their FCS delivery. Professionals with more than 25 years of work experience in the field of rehabilitation for children and youth with CP rated their service higher than those with shorter work experience. Parents and professionals identified common aspects in need of development, i.e. letting the family choose when and what kind of information is provided as well as providing opportunities for the whole family to obtain information. Goal setting and ways to involve families in the rehabilitation planning procedure was experienced as challenging. Collaboration with all involved in the child´s rehabilitation was partly scanty and the results indicate a lack of routines in the transition phases. In the written rehabilitation plans the goals were not well reflected in the children´s needs and functional difficulties.

Conclusion: This thesis identified examples in the rehabilitation planning procedure of good practice in which collaboration with various parties and clear formal processes occurred. Areas in need of development were also identified. Standardized formal programme processes and policies and a named care manager for all families could provide a starting point in developing and improving the services to ensure all families have the possibility to be involved in their child´s rehabilitation service.

Family-centeredness in service and rehabilitation planning for children and youth with cerebral palsy in Finland. (Doctoral dissertation),

Jeglinsky, I. (2012)

Objectives: The overall aim of this thesis was to explore and describe the familycentredness and rehabilitation planning procedure for children and youth with cerebral palsy (CP) in Finland. The main focus was on how professionals working with children and youth with cerebral palsy describe and document the rehabilitation planning procedure and how family-centredness was perceived by professionals and parents.

Methods: Participants were team members in neuropediatric multidisciplinary teams in central and university hospitals and government special schools as well as physiotherapy private practitioners who had an agreement with the Social Insurance Institution. Parents visiting two university hospital neuropediatric wards participated in one study (II). Family-centredness in services (FCS) was evaluated by the Measure of Processes of Care questionnaires. To get a deeper insight in the rehabilitation planning procedure, focus group interviews were conducted. Two researchers conducted the interviews which were tape recorded and transcribed. Three content areas guided the interviews: goal-setting, different transition phases and the use of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health, Children and Youth version. A retrospective cross-sectional register study was used to analyze the interrelation between needs and functional difficulties and the therapeutic goals in written rehabilitation plans. The ICF-CY was used as a reference in the analysis.

Results: Professionals and parents rated the family-centred service as fair to moderate. There was a significant difference in how professionals of different disciplines rated their FCS delivery. Professionals with more than 25 years of work experience in the field of rehabilitation for children and youth with CP rated their service higher than those with shorter work experience. Parents and professionals identified common aspects in need of development, i.e. letting the family choose when and what kind of information is provided as well as providing opportunities for the whole family to obtain information. Goal setting and ways to involve families in the rehabilitation planning procedure was experienced as challenging. Collaboration with all involved in the child´s rehabilitation was partly scanty and the results indicate a lack of routines in the transition phases. In the written rehabilitation plans the goals were not well reflected in the children´s needs and functional difficulties.

Conclusion: This thesis identified examples in the rehabilitation planning procedure of good practice in which collaboration with various parties and clear formal processes occurred. Areas in need of development were also identified. Standardized formal programme processes and policies and a named care manager for all families could provide a starting point in developing and improving the services to ensure all families have the possibility to be involved in their child´s rehabilitation service.

Family-Oriented Interventions for the Prevention of Chemical Dependency in Children and Adolescents

Demarsh J, Kumpfer KL. (1986)

Researchers and clinicians are begining to recognize the valuable resource that parents and families are for increasing the effectiveness of substance abuse prevention programs for youth and adolescents. To date, however, most prevention interventions have been developed for use in community or school-based programs. There is a growing number of family-oriented interventions which have been developed specifically as substance abuse prevention programs, or may be easily adapted for use by prevention specialists. This article will review these family-oriented interventions and discuss outcome effectiveness data when available.

Family-oriented program models, helpgiving practices, and parental control appraisals

Trivette, Carol, Dunst, Carl, Boyd, Kimberly & Hamby, Deborah (1995)

Findings from 2 studies investigating sources of variations in parents' assessment of help-giving practices and personal control appraisals are reported. A total of 280 parents of young children with disabilities or at-risk for poor developmental outcomes participated. Parents were involved in early intervention and human services programs that differed along a continuum from professionally centered to family focused. Demographic characteristics showed no relationship to either help-giving practices or perceptions of personal control. In contrast, program characteristics were highly related to help-giving practices, and both program characteristics and help-giving practices were highly related to personal control.

Fathers in neonatal units: Improving infant health by supporting the baby-father bond and mother-father coparenting

Fisher Duncan, Khashu Minesh Adama Esther A. Feeley Nancy (2018)

Abstract

The Family Initiative's International Neonatal Fathers Working Group, whose members are the authors of this paper, has reviewed the literature on engaging fathers in neonatal units, with the aim of making recommendations for improving experience of fathers as well as health outcomes in neonatal practice. We believe that supporting the father-baby bond and supporting co-parenting between the mother and the father benefits the health of the baby, for example, through improved weight gain and oxygen saturation and enhanced rates of breastfeeding. We find, however, that despite much interest in engaging with parents as full partners in the care of their baby, engaging fathers remains sub-optimal. Fathers typically describe the opportunity to bond with their babies, particularly skin-to-skin care, in glowing terms of gratitude, happiness and love. These sensations are underpinned by hormonal and neurobiological changes that take place in fathers when they care for their babies, as also happens with mothers. Fathers, however, are subject to different social expectations from mothers and this shapes how they respond to the situation and how neonatal staff treats them. Fathers are more likely to be considered responsible for earning, they are often considered to be less competent at caring than mothers and they are expected to be "the strong one", providing support to mothers but not expecting it in return. Our review ends with 12 practical recommendations for neonatal teams to focus on: (1) assess the needs of mother and father individually, (2) consider individual needs and wants in family care plans, (3) ensure complete flexibility of access to the neonatal unit for fathers, (4) gear parenting education towards co-parenting, (5) actively promote father-baby bonding, (6) be attentive to fathers hiding their stress, (7) inform fathers directly not just via the mother, (8) facilitate peer-to-peer communication for fathers, (9) differentiate and analyse by gender in service evaluations, (10) train staff to work with fathers and to support co-parenting, (11) develop a father-friendly audit tool for neonatal units, and (12) organise an international consultation to update guidelines for neonatal care, including those of UNICEF.

Feeling heard: a support group for siblings of children with developmental disabilities

McCullough, K. and S. R. Simon (2011)

Siblings are often overlooked in the provision of services to families of children with disabilities. These children also need education and support to ensure their own optimal development. Moreover, as funding and support services decrease, engaging siblings is paramount to the health and safety of children with developmental disabilities. Focusing on the observed therapeutic impact of the group process, this article describes and assesses a model for facilitating a support group for siblings of children with developmental delays. It advocates for significantly increased attention within the social work community to the needs of the sibling population.

Fetal alcohol spectrum disorder prevalence estimates in correctional systems: a systematic literature review.

Popova S, Lange S, Bekmuradov D, Mihic A, Rehm J. (2011)

OBJECTIVES:
The objective of this study was to conduct a systematic search of the literature for studies that estimated the prevalence/incidence of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) in correctional systems in different countries and, based on these data, to estimate a) the number of people with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS)/FASD within the criminal justice system population, and b) the relative risk of becoming imprisoned for individuals with FAS/FASD compared with those without FAS/FASD.
METHOD:
A systematic world literature review of published and unpublished studies concerning the prevalence/incidence of FASD in correctional systems was conducted in multiple electronic bibliographic databases.
SYNTHESIS:
Very little empirical evidence is available on the prevalence of FASD in correctional systems. There were no studies estimating the prevalence/incidence of FASD in correctional systems found for any country other than Canada and the USA. The few studies that have identified incarcerated individuals with FASD estimate that the number of undiagnosed persons in correctional facilities is high. Based on available Canadian data, this study estimates that youths with FASD are 19 times more likely to be incarcerated than youths without FASD in a given year.
CONCLUSION:
More studies investigating the prevalence/incidence of alcohol-affected people in the criminal justice system are required. There is an urgent need to raise awareness about the prevalence and disabilities of individuals with FASD in the criminal justice system and about appropriate responses. The criminal justice system is an ideal arena for intervention efforts aimed at the rehabilitation and prevention or reduction of recidivism in this unique population.

Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders

Rangmar Jenny, Fahlke Claudia (2013)

Kunskapsöversikten har skrivits på uppdrag av Socialstyrelsen. Det är en sammanställning av aktuell vetenskaplig litteratur rörande psykosociala konsekvenser av alkoholrelaterade fosterskador samt preventiva aspekter på denna typ av fosterskador.

Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders in Finnish children and adolescents. Diagnosis, cognition, behavior, adaptation and brain metabolic alterations (Akademisk avhandling).

Fagerlund Å. (2013)

När en gravid kvinna dricker alkohol gör hennes foster det också. Eftersom det inte finns
någon skyddande blodbarriär kan alkohol fritt korsa moderkakan och orsaka omfattande
skador både fysiologiskt, neurologiskt och beteendemässigt på det växande fostret.
Alkoholrelaterade fosterskador går under den engelska termen Fetal Alcohol Spectrum
Disorders (FASD, Fetala alkohol spektrum störningar). Trots att alkoholrelaterade skador är
fullt möjliga att förhindra utgör de idag en av de vanligaste orsakerna till utvecklingsstörning
i västvärlden. I västländer där prevalensundersökningar har gjorts är antalet barn som
föds med FASD fler än de med autismspektrumstörningar, Downs syndrom eller cerebral
pares. I siffror handlar det om mellan 1 och 6 % av alla levande födda, vilket i Finland skulle
innebära att 600–3600 barn föds med alkoholrelaterade fosterskador varje år. Utöver de
direkta toxiska effekterna av alkohol utsätts barnen som föds med FASD ofta för en dubbel
börda i livet. Dels har barnen redan vid födseln neurologiska skador, dels föds de också
med stor sannolikhet in i en familj med minst en missbrukande förälder och en omgivning
där de utsätts för ytterligare risker i sin utveckling. Trots detta är FASD idag en starkt
underdiagnosticerad grupp inom hälso- och sjukvården.
Den här avhandlingen utgör en del av ett större multinationellt forskningsprojekt, The
Collaborative Initiative on Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (CIFASD), som initierades av det
nationella institutet för alkoholmissbruk och alkoholism (National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and
Alcoholism, NIAAA) i USA. Det huvudsakliga syftet med den föreliggande avhandlingen var att
undersöka en kohort med barn och ungdomar med alkoholrelaterade fosterskador i Finland.
Avhandlingen består av fem studier med ett brett fokus på diagnos, kognition, beteende,
adaptiva färdigheter och avvikelser i hjärnans ämnesomsättning hos barn och unga med FASD.
Deltagarna bestod av fyra olika grupper: en grupp som varit utsatt för alkohol under
graviditeten (FASD); en IQ-matchad kontrollgrupp som huvudsakligen bestod av barn med
specifika inlärningssvårigheter (Specific Learning Disorder, SLD); och två grupper med normala
kontroller (CON1 och CON2). Deltagarna rekryterades via genomgång av medicinska journaler,
slumpmässigt urval ur det finska befolkningsregistret och e-postförfrågningar till studerande.
Med diagnoser som är såpass svåra att fastställa som de inom FASD-spektret är det av stor
betydelse att de föreliggande studierna har utförts i nära samarbete med ledande experter
på FASD (prof. Edward Riley och prof. Sarah Mattson från Center for Behavioral Teratology vid
San Diego State University, USA och prof. Eugene Hoyme från Sanford School of Medicine,
University of South Dakota, USA). Deltagarna i föreliggande studier är således mycket noggrant
undersökta och diagnosticerade. I den här avhandlingen testades för första gången de
amerikanska reviderade Institute of Medicines diagnoskriterier för FASD på en finsk population.
Kriterierna visade sig tillförlitliga i att särskilja olika undergrupper bland alkoholskadade barn.
Ett annat värdefullt hjälpmedel som användes vid diagnosticeringen var en speciellt utarbetad
skala för bedömning av de specifika dysmorfa dragen vid FASD (Studie 1).
Syftet med Studie 2 var att klargöra relationen mellan alkoholrelaterade dysmorfa drag och
allmän kognitiv kapacitet. Resultaten visade på en signifikant korrelation mellan dysmorfa
drag och kognitiv kapacitet, så att barn med större avvikelser i sin tillväxt och med mer
dysmorfa drag också tenderade att uppvisa större kognitiva svårigheter. Sambandet var
emellertid måttligt och det kan betonas att fysiologiska markörer och kognitiv kapacitet inte
alls alltid går hand i hand hos individer med FASD.
Barnen och ungdomarna i FASD-gruppen uppvisade omfattande problem i beteende och
mental hälsa jämfört med kontrollgruppen (CON1). I studie 3 utforskades närmare hurudana
risk- och skyddande faktorer som kunde associeras med beteendeproblemen i FASD-gruppen.
Studien fokuserade på diagnosrelaterade och omgivningsrelaterade faktorer. Resultaten visade
att två grupper med förhöjd risk för beteendeproblem kunde urskiljas: 1) Ju längre tid ett barn
hade spenderat intaget på barnhem desto högre risk för beteendeproblem och 2) ju mindre
dysmorfa drag ett barn med FASD hade desto mer omfattande beteendeproblem uppvisade
barnet. Resultaten understryker betydelsen av att inom hälso- och sjukvården uppmärksamma
och ge vård och adekvata insatser också (eller framför allt) till mindre synligt alkoholskadade
barn. Det är också av stor vikt att uppmärksamma behoven och välmåendet hos de barn med
FASD som växer upp på olika former av barnhem. För dessa barn verkar kombinationen av
medfödda fysiologiska och psykologiska skador tillsammans med minskad möjlighet till en nära
och kontinuerlig relation till en närstående vuxen göra dem extra utsatta och sårbara i livet.
Studie 4 fokuserade på adaptiva färdigheter så som kommunikationsförmåga, förmåga att
klara ett dagligt liv och sociala förmågor. Adaptiva färdigheter handlar med andra ord om
förmågor som gradvis hjälper en individ att klara ett självständigt liv, upprätthålla sociala
relationer och integreras i samhället. Resultaten visade att de adaptiva färdigheterna hos
barn och unga som växer upp med FASD är avsevärt sämre än hos både normalt utvecklade
barn och IQ-matchade barn med inlärningssvårigheter. Klart skilda adaptiva profiler
uppdagades där FASD-gruppen klarade sig sämre än barnen med inlärningssvårigheter
som i sin tur klarade sig sämre än barnen i den normala kontrollgruppen. Det är viktigt att
poängtera att barnen med inlärningssvårigheter presterade bättre än FASD-gruppen trots
att de kognitivt befann sig på samma nivå. Den här studien är den första att jämföra adaptiva
förmågor hos en grupp barn och unga med FASD jämfört med både en grupp IQ-matchade
barn med inlärningssvårigheter och en grupp normalt utvecklade barn.
Slutligen påvisades i studie 5 neurokemiska förändringar med hjälp av magnetisk resonansspektroskopi
(MRS) hos tonåringar och unga vuxna med FASD som kunde relateras till
alkoholbruk under fosterstadiet 14–20 år tidigare. De neurokemiska förändringarna kunde
påvisas i ett flertal områden i hjärnan: i den frontala och parietala hjärnbarken, i corpus
callosum, thalamus, i frontala områden med vit substans samt i lilla hjärnans nucleus dentatus.
Förändringarna stämmer överens med den neuropsykologiska profilen vid FASD. Glia celler (vit
hjärnsubstans) verkade mer påverkade av alkohol under fosterstadiet än neuron (nervceller).
Sammantaget kan konstateras att större samhälleliga ansträngningar och resurser borde
fokuseras på att känna igen och diagnosticera FASD och på att stöda speciellt utsatta
riskgrupper av alkoholskadade barn och unga. Utan tillräcklig intervention och stöd löper
de en stor risk för marginalisering och utslagning, vilket är kostsamt inte bara för samhället
utan också för de många barn som växer upp med FASD.

Fetal alcohol spectrum disorders: an over- view

Riley EP, Infante MA, Warren KR. (2011)

When fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) was initially described, diagnosis was based upon physical parameters including facial anomalies and growth retardation, with evidence of developmental delay or mental deficiency. Forty years of research has shown that FAS lies towards the extreme end of what are now termed fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD). The most profound effects of prenatal alcohol exposure are on the developing brain and the cognitive and behavioral effects that ensue. Alcohol exposure affects brain development via numerous pathways at all stages from neurogenesis to myelination. For example, the same processes that give rise to the facial characteristics of FAS also cause abnormal brain development. Behaviors as diverse as executive functioning to motor control are affected. This special issue of Neuropsychology Review addresses these changes in brain and behavior highlighting the relationship between the two. A diagnostic goal is to recognize FAS as a disorder of brain rather than one of physical characteristics.

Fetal alcohol syndrome and the developing socio-emotional brain

Niccols A. (2007)

Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) is currently recognized as the most common known cause of mental retardation, affecting from 1 to 7 per 1000 live-born infants. Individuals with FAS suffer from changes in brain structure, cognitive impairments, and behavior problems. Researchers investigating neuropsychological functioning have identified deficits in learning, memory, executive functioning, hyperactivity, impulsivity, and poor communication and social skills in individuals with FAS and fetal alcohol effects (FAE). Investigators using autopsy and brain imaging methods have identified microcephaly and structural abnormalities in various regions of the brain (including the basal ganglia, corpus callosum, cerebellum, and hippocampus) that may account for the neuropsychological deficits. Results of studies using newer brain imaging and analytic techniques have indicated specific alterations (i.e., displacements in the corpus callosum, increased gray matter density in the perisylvian regions, altered gray matter asymmetry, and disproportionate reductions in the frontal lobes) in the brains of individuals prenatally exposed to alcohol, and their relations with brain function. Future research, including using animal models, could help inform our knowledge of brain-behavior relations in the context of prenatal alcohol exposure, and assist with early identification and intervention.

Identification of intentional communication in students with severe and multiple disabilities

Iacono T, Carter M, Hook J. (1998)

The use of published criteria to determine the intentionality of communicative behaviors of individuals with severe and multiple disabilities is discussed in light of research with individuals with and without intellectual disability. Data were collected from four young students with severe intellectual and physical disabilities in addition to sensory deficits. Communicative sampling procedures were used to explore how behaviors other than co-ordinated attention may signal emerging intentionality. These behaviors, which included persistence, idiosyncratic behaviors, and modifications to signals, in addition to patterns of differential modality use, are discussed as potential indicators. Implications for the identification and development of intentional communication in children with severe and multiple disabilities are discussed, along with directions for future research.

Identifying child functioning from an ICF-CY perspective: Everyday life situations explored in measures of participation

Adolfsson M, Malmqvist J, Pless M, Granlund M. (2011)

Purpose. This study was part of a larger work to develop an authentic measure consisting of code sets for self- or proxy-report of child participation. The aim was to identify common everyday life situations of children and youth based on measures of participation.
Method. The study was descriptive in nature and involved several stages: systematic search of literature to find articles presenting measures for children and youth with disabilities, identifying measures in selected articles, linking items in included measures to the ICF-CY, analysing content in measures presented as performance and participation and identifying aggregations of ICF-CY codes across these measures.
Results. A large number of measures for children and youth with disabilities were identified but only 12 fulfilled the inclusion criteria. A slight distinction in content and age appropriateness appeared. Measures presented as performance covered all the ICF-CY Activities and Participation chapters, whereas measures presented as participation covered five of nine chapters. Three common everyday life situations emerged from the measures: Moving around, Engagement in play and Recreation and leisure.
Conclusion. Only a small number of life situations for children and youth emerged from items in selected measures, thus, other sources are needed to identify more everyday life situations.

Filial Piety, Caregiving Appraisal, and Caregiving Burden

Lai, D. W. L. (2010)

This study examined the effects of filial piety on the appraisal of caregiving burden by Chinese-Canadian family caregivers. A quantitative telephone survey was used as the research design for this study. A total of 339 randomly selected Canadian-Chinese family caregivers of elderly were interviewed by telephone. A hypothesized model denoting both the direct and indirect effects of filial piety on caregiving burden was tested using structural equation modeling. While stressors and appraisal factors reported direct predicting effects on caregiving burden, filial piety indirectly affected caregiving burden by altering appraisals of the caregiver role. Filial piety served as a protective function to reduce the negative effects of stressors and to enhance the positive effect of appraisal factors on caregiving burden.

Filial responsibility: does it matter for care-giving behaviours?

Chappell, N. L. and L. Funk (2012)

This paper examines the relationship between attitudes of filial responsibility and five different types of care-giving behaviours to parents among three cultural groups. It does so within an assessment of the relative importance of cultural versus structural factors for care-giving behaviours. Face-to-face interviews were conducted with 100 Caucasian-Canadians, 90 Chinese-Canadians and 125 Hong Kong-Chinese. Multiple regression analyses assessed the association of cultural and structural factors with behaviours among the total sample and each of the three cultural groups. Limited support was found for an association between care-giving attitudes and care-giving behaviours. Attitudes are related to emotional support only among the two Chinese groups as well as to financial support among Chinese-Canadian respondents and to companionship among Hong Kong-Chinese respondents. Attitudes are not the strongest predictors and are unrelated to assistance with basic and instrumental activities of daily living. However, cultural group per se is a strong predictor of care-giving behaviours as are: parental ill health, living arrangements, and relationship quality. This study suggests gerontological assumptions about the role of societal norms and personal attitudes in parental care-giving should be questioned. It also suggests the need for further inquiry into unpacking those aspects of 'cultural group' that are related to behavioural differences, and the importance of examining multiple types of care-giving behaviours and of distinguishing task-oriented helping behaviour from other types of assistance.

Finansiell och politisk samordning i den lokala välfärden: En ny politisk arena för gemensamma prioriteringar mellan huvudmän. CEFOS rapport nr. 20.

Fridolf, M. (2004)

I denna rapport beskrivs politikeruppdraget vid politisk och finansiell samordning. Vid samordning samlas resurser över organisationsgränser för att användas gemensamt. Det unika med politisk och finansiell samordning är att huvudmännen har ett gemensamt kostnadsansvar. Resurserna kan omfördelas mellan huvudmän. Politisk samordning innebär att en politisk arena skapas som prioriterar resurser över organisationsgränser. I rapporten påvisas att politikeruppdraget skiljer sig mycket åt beroende på vilken inriktning som finns på olika områden; mot samordningsperspektiv eller befolkningsperspektiv. Inriktningen har skapats av vald struktur men också av hur aktörerna ser på sin roll och dess utövande. En ny struktur skapas på den parlamentariska arenan. I denna samordning betonas politikernas roll. Rollskillnader utvecklas dock mellan olika politiker, vilket gör att de får olika betydelse och status. Detta påverkar i sin tur deras inflytande. En samförståndspolitik utvecklas, där politikerna inte driver partipolitik. Genom politisk samordning skapas förutsättningar för gemensamma prioriteringar av behov. Den nya strukturen påverkar politikerna som aktörer i samtliga områden.

I rapporten återges ambitioner med finansiell och politisk samordning samt hur en ny politisk struktur skapas. Dessutom beskrivs politikernas motiv till engagemang, hur de ser på sin uppgift samt hur politisk organisering genom behovsidentifiering, prioritering, resursmobilisering och utvärdering utvecklas. Studien behandlar också politikernas betydelse för samarbete mellan chefer och professionella.

Finding care for the caregiver? Active participation in online health forums attenuates the negative effect of caregiver strain on wellbeing

Tanis M, Das E, Fortgens-Sillmann M. (2011)

This paper focuses on how online health forums may benefit the wellbeing of caregivers. An online questionnaire of caregivers assessed caregiver strain, forum use, and mental and physical wellbeing. Results show a positive relation between caregiver strain and using online health forums to seek emotional support. Furthermore, we find that caregivers with higher levels of caregiver strain report lower mental and physical wellbeing. This relation is however moderated by using online health forums. While the amount of time spent on the online forums did not moderate the relation between caregiver strain and wellbeing, the amount of activity (i. e. the number of messages posted per week) did: Active participation in online health forums attenuates the negative effect of caregiver strain on wellbeing. These findings suggest that online forums are valuable for caregivers and that it is active contribution that matters, rather than simply visiting the online health groups.

Illuminating patients with children up to 18 years of age – A 1-day-inventory study in a psychiatric service

Östman, M., & Eidevall, L. (2005)

This study reports the possibility of accomplishing a survey in an ordinary psychiatric service organization to identify the children and the adolescents in families with a parent with mental illness and to highlight the number of patients in psychiatric treatment with little or virtually no contact with their minor children. The prevalence of patients being parents to minor children was 36% in the total sample consisting of 137 patients, from both inpatient and outpatient services, participating in the survey. Three of four patients were living together with the children. A higher proportion of patients in the outpatient unit were parents to minor children, and more often lived together with them. There were no differences in prevalence of patients with minor children according to sex or diagnostic subgroup. However, female patients more often and patients with a psychosis diagnosis more seldom had the custody of the children. A majority of the patients had communicated with their children about their own situation, showing that psychiatric patients care a lot about the situation of their children, although, according to the patients, the psychiatric services only take an active part in this information in a minority of the cases. The study may be found to be a basis for inspiring structured interventions and treatments programmes, including the minor children of the adult patients seeking psychiatric treatment. Prevention of mental disorders in the oncoming generation is an important issue for all psychiatric professionals, especially in co-operation between adult and child/adolescent psychiatric services.

Immersive communication intervention for speaking and non-speaking children with intellectual disabilities

Van der Schuit, M., Segers, E., van Balkom, H., Stoep, J., & Verhoeven, L. (2010)

The current study demonstrates the effectiveness of an intervention that addresses both home care and day care for children with intellectual disabilities while also taking the large individual differences between the children into account. The KLINc Studio intervention was designed to improve the language development, communication skills, and emergent literacy of 10 children with complex communication needs. The focus of the anchor-based intervention program was on the stimulation of vocabulary learning via the incorporation of AAC into the learning environment in the most natural manner possible. While all of the children showed significant progress across the intervention period of 2 years, the group of speaking children showed greater development in the domains of receptive language and productive syntax than the group of non-speaking children. For heterogeneous groups of children with disabilities, the use of a combined intervention such as that described here appears to be promising.

Immersive communication intervention for speaking and non-speaking children with intellectual disabilities

Van der Schuit, M., Segers, E., van Balkom, H., Stoep, J., & Verhoeven, L. (2010)

The current study demonstrates the effectiveness of an intervention that addresses both home care and day care for children with intellectual disabilities while also taking the large individual differences between the children into account. The KLINc Studio intervention was designed to improve the language development, communication skills, and emergent literacy of 10 children with complex communication needs. The focus of the anchor-based intervention program was on the stimulation of vocabulary learning via the incorporation of AAC into the learning environment in the most natural manner possible. While all of the children showed significant progress across the intervention period of 2 years, the group of speaking children showed greater development in the domains of receptive language and productive syntax than the group of non-speaking children. For heterogeneous groups of children with disabilities, the use of a combined intervention such as that described here appears to be promising.

Impact of fear of falling for Patients and Caregivers. Perceptions before and after Participation in Vestibular and Balance Rehabilitation Therapy

Honaker JA, Kretschmer LW (2014)

The purpose of this study was to investigate the impact of fear of falling (FoF) on older patients with dizziness history and their caregivers to better determine holistic needs when developing a patient-family centered approach to falling risk reduction. A mixed-method design incorporating a phenomenological qualitative approach to explore the impact of fear of falling in fourteen patients as well as a family member or spouse of each patient. Quantitative analysis was used to further interpret results of interviews conducted before and after participation in a vestibular and balance rehabilitation program designed to reduce falling risk and improve balance confidence. Qualitative analysis of participant interviews pre and post vestibular rehabilitation revealed lifestyle changes for both participants and family caregivers due to FoF and need for reducing falling concerns. Age of the patient showed statistically significant differences in levels of balance confidence with younger subjects (≤65 years) showing more concerns about the consequences of falling even after rehabilitation than older subjects (>65 years). The study highlights the impact of FoF on participation and activity levels of patients and family caregivers as well as the need to thoroughly evaluate falling fears to achieve a holistic rehabilitation outcome.

Impact of parent caring on women

Archbold PG (1983)

The impact of parent-caring on the lives of 30 Caucasian women was studied using data from: 1) intensive interviews, 2) participant observations, and 3) the OARS Multidimensional Functional Assessment. Analysis of the qualitative data identified two caregiving modalities: 1) care provision and 2) care management. The social and behavioral precedents and consequences of entering the careprovider or manager role were identified. The costs of caregiving were much greater for providers than managers.

Folkhälsan i Sverige – Årsrapport 2013

Socialstyrelsen & Statens folkhälsoinstitut (2013)

Socialstyrelsens och Statens folkhälsoinstituts rapport ger en aktuell och översiktlig bild av hälsoutvecklingen och dess bestämningsfaktorer. Den visar bland annat att bland kvinnor och män 35-44 år har risken att få stroke ökat med 21 respektive 15 procent sedan 1995

Folkhälsorapport

Socialstyrelsen (2009)

Folkhälsorapport 2009 visar bland annat att risken att dö i hjärtinfarkt och stroke har minskat väsentligt, medan dödligheten i bröstcancer däremot har minskat endast marginellt, och dödligheten i lungcancer fortfarande ökar bland kvinnor, medan den sjunker bland män. Psykisk ohälsa är vanligt hos yngre kvinnor; självmordsförsöken ökar.

For better or worse: Factors predicting outcomes of family care of older people over a one-year period. A six-country European study

Lüdecke Daniel, Bien Barbara, McKee Kevin, Krevers Barbro (2018)

Abstract [en]

OBJECTIVES: Demographic change has led to an increase of older people in need of long-term care in nearly all European countries. Informal carers primarily provide the care and support needed by dependent people. The supply and willingness of individuals to act as carers are critical to sustain informal care resources as part of the home health care provision. This paper describes a longitudinal study of informal care in six European countries and reports analyses that determine those factors predicting the outcomes of family care over a one-year period.

METHODS: Analyses are based on data from the EUROFAMCARE project, a longitudinal survey study of family carers of older people with baseline data collection in 2004 and follow-up data collection a year later in six European countries (Germany, Greece, Italy, Poland, Sweden, and the United Kingdom), N = 3,348. Descriptive statistics of the sample characteristics are reported. Binary logistic random-intercept regressions were computed, predicting the outcome of change of the care dyad's status at follow-up.

RESULTS: Where care is provided by a more distant family member or by a friend or neighbour, the care-recipient is significantly more likely to be cared for by someone else (OR 1.62) or to be in residential care (OR 3.37) after one year. The same holds true if the care-recipient has memory problems with a dementia diagnosis (OR 1.79/OR 1.84). Higher dependency (OR 1.22) and behavioural problems (OR 1.76) in the care-recipient also lead to a change of care dyad status. Country of residence explained a relatively small amount of variance (8%) in whether a care-recipient was cared for by someone else after one year, but explained a substantial amount of variance (52%) in whether a care-recipient was in residential care. Particularly in Sweden, care-recipients are much more likely to be cared for by another family or professional carer or to be in residential care, whereas in Greece the status of the care dyad is much less likely to change.

DISCUSSION: The majority of family carers continued to provide care to their respective older relatives over a one-year period, despite often high levels of functional, cognitive and behavioural problems in the care-recipient. Those family carers could benefit most from appropriate support. The carer/care-recipient relationship plays an important role in whether or not a family care dyad remains intact over a one-year period. The support of health and social care services should be particularly targeted toward those care dyads where there is no partner or spouse acting as carer, or no extended family network that might absorb the caring role when required. Distant relatives, friends or acquaintances who are acting as carers might need substantial intervention if their caregiving role is to be maintained.

Impacts of family support in early childhood intervention research

Friend, A. C., J. A. Summers, et al. (2009)

The purpose of this paper is to review intervention research to determine the types of family support that are reported and evaluated in early childhood. This review includes 26 articles evaluating (a) parent training programs; (b) general family-centered practice models which offer comprehensive supports; (c) peer support; (d) two-generation programs; and (e) respite care. In the article, we focus our discussion on: (a) the definitions or description of family support, (b) the family variables or impacts evaluated and their findings, and (c) the link between support and impacts to both the ECO outcomes and the family quality of life domains. This review indicates a need for specific and consistent terminology in defining family support in the early intervention field. Further, a family support framework to guide future research to investigate both long-term and short-term outcomes for families is warranted. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2012 APA, all rights reserved)(journal abstract)

Implementation of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and the ICF Children and Youth Version (ICF-CY) Within the Context of Augmentative and Alternative Communication

Pless M, Granlund M. (2012)

The purpose of this article is to discuss the implementation of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), and the ICF version for Children and Youth (ICF-CY), within the context of augmentative and alternative communication (AAC). First, the use of the ICF and the ICF-CY in AAC research is analyzed. Second, examples of training and implementation of ICF from other contexts besides AAC are provided. Finally, we synthesize data to provide directions for future implementation of the ICF and ICF-CY in the field of AAC. We conclude that, within AAC, organizational routines and intervention documents need to be adapted to the universal language and classification framework of the ICF and ICF-CY. Furthermore, examples are needed to demonstrate how factors affect implementation at organizational and individual levels.

Implementation, process, and preliminary outcome evaluation of two community programs for persons with stroke and their care partners

Huijbregts MPJ, Myers AM, Streiner D, Teasell R. (2008)

Purpose: This evaluation compared a new self-management program with land and water exercise (Moving On after STroke or MOST) to a standard education program (Living with Stroke or LWS). Participants: Of 30 persons with stroke (average age 68 and 2 years post stroke), 18 selected MOST and 12 chose LWS. Sixteen care partners participated. Method: Assessments at baseline, program completion, and 3-month follow-up included the Reintegration to Normal Living (RNL) Index, Activity-specific Balance Confidence (ABC) scale, exercise participation, and goal attainment (for the MOST group). Program delivery costs were calculated and focus groups conducted to examine participant expectations and experiences. Results: Social support was an important benefit of both programs, but only MOST participants improved significantly on the RNL (p < .05) and ABC (p < .001). Seventy-eight percent of all short-term personal goals in MOST were achieved, and overall goal attainment was above the expected level. At follow-up, a higher percentage of MOST participants were enrolled in exercise programs (p < .05). Conclusion: Although self-management programs with exercise are more costly to deliver than standard educational programs, these preliminary results indicate that such programs may be more effective in helping persons with stroke and care partners deal with the challenges of living with stroke.

Implementing a training intervention to support caregivers after stroke: a process evaluation examining the initiation and embedding of programme change

Clarke DJ, Godfrey M, Hawkins R, Sadler E, Harding G, Forster A, et al. (2013)

Background
Medical Research Council (MRC) guidance identifies implementation as a key element of the development and evaluation process for complex healthcare interventions. Implementation is itself a complex process involving the mobilization of human, material, and organizational resources to change practice within settings that have pre-existing structures, historical patterns of relationships, and routinized ways of working. Process evaluations enable researchers and clinicians to understand how implementation proceeds and what factors impact on intended program change. A qualitative process evaluation of the pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial; Training Caregivers after Stroke was conducted to examine how professionals were engaged in the work of delivering training; how they reached and involved caregivers for whom the intervention was most appropriate; how did those on whom training was targeted experience and respond to it. Normalization Process Theory, which focuses attention on implementing and embedding program change, was used as a sensitizing framework to examine selected findings.

Results
Contextual factors including organizational history and team relationships, external policy, and service development initiatives, impinged on implementation of the caregiver training program in unintended ways that could not have been predicted through focus on mechanisms of individual and collective action at unit level. Factors that facilitated or impeded the effectiveness of the cascade training model used, whether and how stroke unit teams made sense of and engaged individually and collectively with a complex caregiver training intervention, and what impact these factors had on embedding the intervention in routine stroke unit practice were identified.

Conclusions
Where implementation of complex interventions depends on multiple providers, time needs to be invested in reaching agreement on who will take responsibility for delivery of specific components and in determining how implementation and its effectiveness will be monitored. This goes beyond concern with intervention fidelity; explicit consideration also needs to be given to the implementation process in terms of how program change can be effected at organizational, practice, and service delivery levels. Normalization Process Theory's constructs help identify vulnerable features of implementation processes in respect of the work involved in embedding complex interventions.

Framgångsrika preventionsprogram för barn och unga. En forskningsöversikt

Ferrer-Wreder, L.; Stattin, H.; Cass Lorente, C.; Tubman, J.G. & Adamson, L. (2005)

Den här boken handlar om framgångsrika amerikanska och europeiska preventionsprogram. De har i utvärderingar visat sig minska ungdomars problembeteenden och främja barns sociala utveckling. I boken ges många exempel på välfungerande preventionsprogram som involverar familj, skola och närsamhälle. En bok för socialarbetare, psykologer och folkhälsoplanerare och andra med intresse för förebyggande arbete. Boken har tillkommit på initiativ av IMS, Institutet för utveckling av metoder i socialt arbete.

Framgångsrika preventionsprogram för barn- och unga. En forskningsöversikt.

Ferrer-Wreder L, Stattin H, Cass Lorante C, Tubman JG, Adamsson L. (2005)

Den här boken handlar om framgångsrika amerikanska och europeiska preventionsprogram. De har i utvärderingar visat sig minska ungdomars problembeteenden och främja barns sociala utveckling. I boken ges många exempel på välfungerande preventionsprogram som involverar familj, skola och närsamhälle. En bok för socialarbetare, psykologer och folkhälsoplanerare och andra med intresse för förebyggande arbete. Boken har tillkommit på initiativ av IMS, Institutet för utveckling av metoder i socialt arbete.

Frequency of occurrence and child presence in family activities: A quantitative, comparative study of children with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities and children with typical development

Axelsson AK, Wilder J. (2013)

Objectives:
The objective was to investigate the performance aspect of participation, operationalized as the frequency of occurrence of family activities and child presence in these activities for children with profound intellectual and multiple disabilities (PIMD) and children with typical development (TD). The focus was also on how family and child characteristics are related to the frequency of occurrence of family activities. This is part of a larger research project investigating facilitating factors for participation in children with PIMD.
Methods:
A descriptive, comparative study was performed using a questionnaire developed for the purpose.
Results:
In the families with a child with PIMD, the majority of activities occurred less often than in families with children with TD. In both groups, relationships were found between the frequency of occurrence of family activities and total family income, as well as the educational level of the parents. For children with PIMD, motor ability, cognition, health, and behaviour, were related to frequency of occurrence. Moreover, the presence of the children in the activities differed in the two groups; the children with PIMD were present in the activities less often.
Discussion:
Considering a long-term perspective, low occurrence of family activities and child presence may affect child development and everyday functioning. Knowledge about factors related to the occurrence of family activities and child presence in them, as well as an understanding of its causes, can promote the provision of everyday natural learning opportunities for children with PIMD.

Friends in need': designing and implementing a psychoeducational group for school children from druginvolved families.

Dore MM, Nelson-Zlupko L, Kaufmann E. ' (1999)

Despite widespread recognition of the risks that parental drug use pose to children, few resources are available to help such children. Using a developmental intervention approach, the authors designed and tested a model curriculum for use with groups of latency-aged children in schools located in communities where drug use is pervasive. In implementing this curriculum, the authors documented the need that children affected by family drug use have for workable strategies and skills for coping with aversive environments. The responsiveness of group participants to structure, predictability, and affirmation in the groups was remarkable. Measurable changes occurred in classroom behavior and feelings of self-worth. Obstacles to implementing and testing such an intervention are discussed.

Frightened, threatening, and dissociative parental behavior in low-risk samples: Description, discussion, and interpretations

Hesse, E., & Main, M. (2006)

In 1990 we advanced the hypothesis that frightened and frightening (FR) parental behavior would prove to be linked to both unresolved (U) adult attachment status as identified in the Adult Attachment Interview and to infant disorganized/disoriented (D) attachment as assessed in the Ainsworth Strange Situation. Here, we present a coding system for identifying and scoring the intensity of the three primary forms of FR behavior (frightened, threatening, and dissociative) as well as three subsidiary forms. We review why each primary form may induce fear of the parent (the infant's primary "haven of safety"), placing the infant in a disorganizing approach-flight paradox. We suggest that, being linked to the parent's own unintegrated traumatic experiences (often loss or maltreatment), FR behaviors themselves are often guided by parental fright, and parallel the three "classic" mammalian responses to fright: flight, attack, and freezing behavior. Recent studies of U to FR, as well as FR to D relations are presented, including findings regarding AMBIANCE/FR+. Links between dissociation, FR, U, and D are explored. Parallel processing and working memory are discussed as they relate to these phenomena.

Informal caregiving in old age : Content, coping, difficulties and satisfaction

Kristensson Ekwall, A. (2004)

Older people take a great share of caregiving responsibility already and thus understanding of their strain, coping and satis-faction is required. The aim was to investigate dimensions of caregiving activities among elderly (75+) caregivers and to study the dimensions in relation to health-related quality of life (Paper I). It was also to investigate quality of life in relation to loneliness, caregiving, social network, gender, age and economic status among men and women in a population-based sample aged 75 or older (Paper II). Another aim was to investigate coping strategies and sense of coherence (SOC) in relation to gender, the extent of care, caregiving activities and QoL in a sample of caregivers aged 75+ (n=171) and to explore the reliability and validity of an instrument assessing coping (CAMI) (Paper III). It was also to study correlation between gender, extent and content of the care, coping, satisfaction and difficulties in the caregiving situation and to identify clusters of caregivers (Paper IV), and to psycho-metrically explore two instruments assessing satisfaction (CASI) and difficulties (CADI) in the care (Paper IV) as well as sources of satisfaction together with caregiving difficulties. Responses to a Swedish postal survey (n=4278) (Paper II) showed that 18% helped another person due to that person's impaired health (Paper I), 41.6% women among the caregivers, mean age 81.8 (SD 4.96) for men 81.7 (SD 4.32). The second sample included 171 caregivers (59.6% men, mean age 82.1, SD 4.6, women 80.6, SD 3.9), response rate 47%, of whom almost 70% provided help every day (Papers III & IV). Adapting their activities to be prepared if something happened (52%), having regular contact to prevent problems (35%), helping in contacts with the hospital (57%), helping with IADL (49%), PADL (14%), medical care (11%) and helping to improve functions (14%) were activities reported. Adapting own activities, regular contact, weak economy and needing help with IADL oneself predicted low MCS-12 (Paper I). Caregivers had a larger social network and reported feelings of loneliness less often than non-caregivers, indicating that caregiving takes place mainly in the phase when the older person is healthy (Paper II). There were gender differences in loneliness, with women being more lonely. Loneliness and a small network were associated with low QoL among caregivers as well as elderly in general (Paper II). The 25% of the respondents (n=171) with the lowest MCS-12 scores were more dissatisfied with the information given about the practical and medical care than those with higher scores (Paper III). Higher MCS-12 predicted with using self-sustaining coping and a high SOC while poor economy and asking for social and practical support predicted low scores. The most frequent source of satisfaction was seeing the care recipient happy (77%) and problems with mobility in the person cared for (28%) and difficulties sleeping were frequently reported (14%) which shows that feelings of satisfaction were more frequent than experiencing difficulties. The difficulties did not differ between men and women.

From Broken Attachments to Earned Security: The Role of Empathy in Therapeutic Change (The John Bowlby Memorial Conference Monograph Series)

ODGERS, A. (2014)

The 2011 John Bowlby Memorial Conference, 'From Broken Attachments to Earned Security - The Role of Empathy in Therapeutic Change', focussed on what needs to take place to facilitate empathy and attunement and ultimately the achievement of earned security. The confernce posed the challenge of how to re-establish a secure sense of self, mutuality, and the capacity for inter/intra-subjectivity when difficulties in empathy and attunement exist as a result of relational trauma. This can be between parent and child, within adult relationships, between client and therapist, or in organisational contexts.

The outstanding collection of papers in this volume make a significant contribution to the field of attachment and our understanding of how child rearing affects each aspect of our lives, from the interpersonal to the organisational and societal. Each paper moves beyond the academic and theoretical to provide answers to the many difficult questions raised at the conference.

The practical, sometimes step-by-step explanation of the use of empathy in one-to-one clinical work, in health service organisations or society generally, offer a positive and hopeful way forward. All of the presenters faced up to the challenges of repairing or reversing the impact of derailed attachments and the toxic impact of trauma, offering a realistic but hopeful route to improved relating and healthier attachments.

This publication will be a valuable resource for students, seasoned practitioners, and health service professionals alike who want to enhance their understanding of empathy and attachment in this demanding field.

Subject areas covered by your book in order of importance and key subject area:

- causes of insecure attachments

- impact of relational trauma

- how to re-establish a secure sense of self

- working one to one and in organisational settings

From cognitive information to shared meaning: healing principles in prevention intervention

Beardslee W.R., Swatling, S., Hoke, L., Rothberg P.C., van de Velde, P., Focht, L. & Podorefsky, D. (1998)

Families with parental affective disorder participated in a large-scale longitudinal study which involved participation in a standardized, short-term, psychoeducational preventive intervention. These families were followed for at least 3 years. An analysis of clinical material from the first 12 families to complete the intervention identified specific healing principles that contributed to positive changes in behavior and attitude. The healing elements of the intervention included demystification of the illness, modulation of shame and guilt, increase in the capacity for perspective taking, and development of a hopeful perspective and belief in one's own competence. Therapeutic effectiveness evolved in a process that linked cognitive information and presented depression as an illness that could be understood with the acknowledgement of family members' individual and collective experience. In this way, families developed a shared understanding of the illness that was useful over time. This article discusses the ways in which the healing principles promoted changes in family members' behavior and attitude, which, in turn, enhanced resiliency in children.

From symptom to context: a rewiev on the litterature on refugee childrens mental health

De Haene, L., Grietens, H., & Verschueren, K. (2007)

In this paper, we aim to review the growing body of research on the psychosocial well-being of refugee children. We start with an overview of the chronological models for the refugee experience that conceptualize the process of forced migration as a long-term adverse context of cumulating risk factors, functioning as a pervasive threat to refugee children's mental health. Next, we briefly summarize the literature on refugee children's mental health as the starting point for a critical reflection on the dominance of the symptom-focused, trauma-centred approach which characterises much of refugee research. Drawing from this, we argue for the pertinence of research on refugee children's mental health from a family perspective. Finally, we propose a model for the refugee family experience, which integrates multiple individual, family and cultural processes, and we organise existing findings on refugee families in relation to six domains of the refugee family life. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

From symptom to context: a rewiev on the litterature on refugee childrens mental health

De Haene, L., Grietens, H., & Verschueren, K. (2007)

In this paper, we aim to review the growing body of research on the psychosocial well-being of refugee children. We start with an overview of the chronological models for the refugee experience that conceptualize the process of forced migration as a long-term adverse context of cumulating risk factors, functioning as a pervasive threat to refugee children's mental health. Next, we briefly summarize the literature on refugee children's mental health as the starting point for a critical reflection on the dominance of the symptom-focused, trauma-centred approach which characterises much of refugee research. Drawing from this, we argue for the pertinence of research on refugee children's mental health from a family perspective. Finally, we propose a model for the refugee family experience, which integrates multiple individual, family and cultural processes, and we organise existing findings on refugee families in relation to six domains of the refugee family life. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)

Från fattigvård till socialtjänst: om socialt arbete och utomparlamentarisk aktivitet

Pettersson, U. (2011)

Vilken människosyn och vilka värderingar ligger till grund för socialtjänstens verksamhet, och hur har de påverkat uppbyggnaden av dagens socialtjänst? Kan sociala insatser huvudsakligen beskrivas som myndighetsutövning, där även tvång kan komma i fråga, eller kan de ses som en verksamhet med respekt för den enskildes vilja och integritet? Under socialvårdens utveckling från fattigvård till socialtjänst har två utomparlamentariska grupper utifrån olika ideologiska utgångspunkter haft stor betydelse för socialvårdslagarnas innehåll och utformning. Centralförbundet för socialt arbete (CSA) verkade som initiativtagare och pådrivare när de första lagarna stiftades vid förra sekelskiftet. Samarbetskommittén för socialvårdens målfrågor, som bildades i slutet av 1960-talet, hade möjlighet att påverka Socialtjänstlagens slutliga utformning.

Boken innehåller en skildring av den tidigare socialvården och beskriver hur de två grupperna agerade för att få gehör för sina idéer. Särskild uppmärksamhet ägnas Samarbetskommittén och dess framgångar och misslyckanden under den 14 år långa lagstiftningsprocessen, som i det turbulenta slutskedet med många regeringsskiften och skiftande ideologier särskilt kom att handla om tvångsvården av vuxna missbrukare.

Boken vänder sig främst till studerande och verksamma inom socialt arbete, men bör även vara av intresse för närliggande ämnesområden inom samhällsvetenskap och historia.

Från systemteori till familjeterapi

Schjödt B, Egeland TA (1994)

Denna grundbok i familjeterapi ger en bred introduktion till familjeterapins historia, dess grundläggande idéer och de viktigaste familjeterapeutiska modellerna.
Boken behandlar bl a:
• familjeterapins historia från 1950-talet till våra dagar,
• det teoretiska fundamentet för familjeterapi, inklusive en introduktion till systemteori, livscykelteori och kommunikationsteori,
• de viktigaste familjeterapeutiska modellerna, med fokus på deras teoretiska bas och praktiska användning.
Boken är avsedd för grundläggande högskole- och universitetsutbildning i psykologi, socialt arbete, vård och omsorg. Den är av intresse för alla som arbetar med familjer: psykologer, socionomer, vårdpersonal och präster.

Informell och formell vård hos äldre personer i ordinärt boende – förändringar och samspel över tid 2001-2015 i SNAC projektet

Anders Wimo, Ron Handels, Sölve Elmståhl, Cecilia Fagerström, Laura Fratiglioni, Ulrika Isaksson, Ole Larsen, Johan Sanmartin Berglund, Britt-Marie Sjölund, Anders Sköldunger, Maria Wahlberg (2020)

Anhöriga och andra närståendes informella insatser utgör en stor del av de samlade insatserna hos äldre personer. Resultat från olika undersökningar tyder på att de närståendes insatser är 2-3 gånger så omfattande som den formella vården och omsorgen i det ordinära boendet (i Sverige i huvudsak som hemtjänst) och hos demenssjuka personer är de närståendes insatser än mer omfattande.
Från SNAC projektet har tidigare en vetenskaplig artikel publicerats som analyserar s k baslinjedata från perioden 2001-2003. Förutom att bekräfta att de närståendes insatser är mycket mer omfattande än hemtjänstens, så visades också att det finns risk att felskatta omfattningen om inte befolkningsbaserade data (t ex SNAC) används. Resultatet visade också att närståendes insatser till personer med demenssjukdom också var mer omfattande jämfört med ej demenssjuka.

Socialdepartementet gav SNAC i uppdrag att följa upp resultatet från den studien och
analysera tidstrender i samspelet mellan informell och formell vård hos personer äldre än 80 år i ordinärt boende, med eller utan kognitiv funktionsnedsättning, i SNAC-projektet, något som resulterat i denna rapport.

Senast uppdaterad 2021-01-25 av Peter Eriksson, ansvarig utgivare Lennart Magnusson