11 results on '"Child Guidance economics"'
Search Results
2. Enhancing pediatric mental health care: strategies for preparing a community.
- Author
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Foy JM and Perrin J
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child Guidance economics, Community Mental Health Services economics, Health Education, Humans, Primary Health Care, Child Guidance organization & administration, Community Mental Health Services organization & administration
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Enhancing pediatric mental health care: strategies for preparing a primary care practice.
- Author
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Foy JM, Kelleher KJ, and Laraque D
- Subjects
- Ambulatory Care Information Systems, Child, Child Guidance economics, Chronic Disease, Community Mental Health Centers economics, Family, Humans, Mental Health Services economics, Mental Health Services organization & administration, Primary Health Care economics, Child Guidance organization & administration, Community Mental Health Centers organization & administration, Primary Health Care organization & administration
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Searching for success: boys, family aspirations, and opportunities in Gabon, ca. 1900-1940.
- Author
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Rich J
- Subjects
- Child, Child Behavior ethnology, Child Behavior physiology, Child Behavior psychology, Child Guidance economics, Child Guidance education, Child Guidance history, Child Guidance legislation & jurisprudence, Family Characteristics ethnology, Family Relations ethnology, Family Relations legislation & jurisprudence, Gabon ethnology, History, 20th Century, Humans, Male, Missionaries, Religion history, Socioeconomic Factors, Child Welfare economics, Child Welfare ethnology, Child Welfare history, Child Welfare legislation & jurisprudence, Child Welfare psychology, Education economics, Education history, Education legislation & jurisprudence, Employment economics, Employment history, Employment legislation & jurisprudence, Employment psychology, Parent-Child Relations ethnology, Parent-Child Relations legislation & jurisprudence, Religious Missions economics, Religious Missions history, Religious Missions legislation & jurisprudence, Religious Missions psychology, Social Change history, Transients and Migrants education, Transients and Migrants history, Transients and Migrants legislation & jurisprudence, Transients and Migrants psychology
- Abstract
Boys growing up in rural Gabon between 1900 and 1940 negotiated with many challenges: the rise of migrant labor, famines and hardships brought on by World War I, the growth of Christianity and African-based spiritual traditions, and the undermining of clans, which had been the main form of social and political organization in the nineteenth century. Parents, extended family members, missionaries, and European businesses recruited boys to serve their varied interests. Boys in turn developed new self-understandings by leaving their homes as students, workers, and clients of older men. This article examines the life histories of four boys to trace the successes and challenges that individual boys encountered in this turbulent era. Interestingly, older biological relatives of boys generally succeeded in maintaining their authority over children living far from home, although the education and wages that boys received forced older men to offer boys more benefits.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Children in the archives: epistolary evidence, youth agency, and the social meanings of "coming of age" in interwar Nyasaland.
- Author
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Lee CJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adolescent Behavior ethnology, Adolescent Behavior physiology, Adolescent Behavior psychology, Child, Child Behavior ethnology, Child Behavior physiology, Child Behavior psychology, Child Guidance economics, Child Guidance education, Child Guidance history, Child Guidance legislation & jurisprudence, Family Relations ethnology, Family Relations legislation & jurisprudence, Female, History, 20th Century, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Malawi ethnology, Male, Race Relations history, Race Relations legislation & jurisprudence, Race Relations psychology, Young Adult, Child Welfare economics, Child Welfare ethnology, Child Welfare history, Child Welfare legislation & jurisprudence, Child Welfare psychology, Cultural Characteristics, Family Characteristics ethnology, Research education, Research history, Social Change history, Social Conditions economics, Social Conditions history, Social Conditions legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
This study looks at multiracial boys and girls, often referred to as "half castes," in Nyasaland. It reconstructs the status and agency of these children by assessing the ways in which they maneuvered local African and European communities to explore opportunities that would improve their individual situations. At times they took initiative by writing letters to the Nyasaland administration for financial support. Furthermore, state responses to these letters provide evidence of how the state perceived these children, particularly the moral responsibility felt given that their fathers were often white settlers and at times colonial officials. This article also discusses the general challenges and opportunities that childhood experiences raise, with specific attention to the kind of subaltern social knowledge that such evidence presents--knowledge that challenges conventional visions of what constitutes history and who makes it.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Systematic review of preventive interventions for children's mental health: what would work in Australian contexts?
- Author
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Bayer J, Hiscock H, Scalzo K, Mathers M, McDonald M, Morris A, Birdseye J, and Wake M
- Subjects
- Australia, Child, Child Behavior Disorders prevention & control, Child Guidance economics, Child, Preschool, Evidence-Based Medicine, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Mood Disorders prevention & control, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Child Guidance methods, Mental Disorders prevention & control, Program Evaluation
- Abstract
In childhood, mental health problems primarily consist of behaviour and emotional problems. These affect one in every seven children (i.e. 200 000 in Australia). Left untreated, up to 50% of preschool problems continue through the childhood years. Because of their high prevalence, population-based approaches will be needed to reduce their associated burden. The aim of the present study was therefore to identify evidence-based preventive interventions for behavioural and emotional problems of children aged 0-8 years. Randomized controlled trials of preventive interventions for behavioural and emotional problems were located by searching standard clinical databases and systematic reviews. The authors determined which programmes were effective and ineffective, dividing the effective programmes into those with high or low risk of trial bias. Among effective programmes, the most promising for delivery in Australian contexts were identified, selected for their strength of evidence, sample comparability to Australia's population, and programme compatibility with Australia's service system. Around 50 preventive interventions have been evaluated in randomized controlled trials. Most targeted children's behavioural problems, and a few targeted emotional problems. Three US programmes have the best balance of evidence: in infancy, the individual Nurse Home Visitation Programme; at preschool age, the individual Family Check Up; at school age, the Good Behaviour Game class programme. Three parenting programmes in England and Australia are also worthy of highlight: the Incredible Years group format, Triple P individual format, and Parent Education Programme group format. Effective preventive interventions exist primarily for behaviour and, to a lesser extent, emotional problems, and could be disseminated from research to mainstream in Australia, ensuring fidelity to original programmes. Future research should develop programmes targeting emotional problems, and replicate effective programmes for behaviour problems in quality population translation trials. Randomized trial methods in staged roll-outs can determine population cost-benefits for children's mental health without delaying dissemination.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Fatherhood, childism, and the creation of society.
- Author
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Wall J
- Subjects
- Child, Child Care economics, Child Care history, Child Care legislation & jurisprudence, Child Care psychology, Child Guidance economics, Child Guidance education, Child Guidance history, Child Guidance legislation & jurisprudence, Child, Preschool, Family Characteristics ethnology, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Social Conditions economics, Social Conditions history, Social Conditions legislation & jurisprudence, Child Welfare economics, Child Welfare ethnology, Child Welfare history, Child Welfare legislation & jurisprudence, Child Welfare psychology, Family Health ethnology, Father-Child Relations ethnology, Fathers education, Fathers history, Fathers legislation & jurisprudence, Fathers psychology, Religion history, Social Values ethnology
- Abstract
This essay argues for a new religious ethical approach to fatherhood centered on children and their expanding capabilities for participation in society. Under the notion of "childism"—in analogy to feminism, womanism, humanism, and the like—it takes the perspective of the experiences and concerns of childhood as such. In contrast with a soft patriarchal argument for fatherhood that dominates much religious discourse today, it argues for a larger and more hopeful vision of fatherhood as directed toward the human social good. This requires, methodologically, a richer hermeneutical circle between religion and the social sciences. Substantively, it calls for Christian and other religious ethicists to re-imagine fatherhood as an integrated public–private responsibility that aims to cultivate children’s fully human social creativity as images of their Creator.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. A crisis in child psychiatric service delivery: why hasn't the piper been paid?
- Author
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Mrazek DA
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child Guidance economics, Female, Humans, Male, United States, Adolescent Behavior, Child Guidance trends, Health Services Needs and Demand statistics & numerical data, Suicide statistics & numerical data
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. [Useful citizens for the fatherland: the education of the "daughters of the people" in Argentina, 1884-1916].
- Author
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Lionetti L
- Subjects
- Anthropology, Cultural education, Anthropology, Cultural history, Argentina ethnology, Child, Child Care economics, Child Care history, Child Care legislation & jurisprudence, Child Care psychology, Child, Preschool, Female, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Humans, Male, Social Change history, Social Dominance, Child Guidance economics, Child Guidance education, Child Guidance history, Child Guidance legislation & jurisprudence, Child Welfare economics, Child Welfare ethnology, Child Welfare history, Child Welfare legislation & jurisprudence, Child Welfare psychology, Civil Rights economics, Civil Rights education, Civil Rights history, Civil Rights legislation & jurisprudence, Civil Rights psychology, Education economics, Education history, Education legislation & jurisprudence, Social Conditions economics, Social Conditions history, Social Conditions legislation & jurisprudence
- Published
- 2001
10. Long-term outcomes of early childhood programs: analysis and recommendations.
- Author
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Gomby DS, Larner MB, Stevenson CS, Lewit EM, and Behrman RE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Child Guidance economics, Child Guidance trends, Child, Preschool, Cost-Benefit Analysis trends, Early Intervention, Educational economics, Family Therapy economics, Family Therapy trends, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Learning Disabilities economics, Learning Disabilities psychology, Male, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Psychosocial Deprivation, Public Assistance economics, Public Assistance trends, United States, Early Intervention, Educational trends, Learning Disabilities prevention & control, Personality Development
- Published
- 1995
11. Two-generation programs: design, cost, and short-term effectiveness.
- Author
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St Pierre RG, Layzer JI, and Barnes HV
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Case Management economics, Child, Child, Preschool, Combined Modality Therapy, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Patient Care Team economics, Social Problems economics, Social Problems prevention & control, United States, Vocational Guidance economics, Child Guidance economics, Early Intervention, Educational economics, Parenting, Parents education, Vocational Education economics
- Abstract
Two-generation programs are relatively new attempts to deal with the nation's social ills. In two-generation programs, services such as early childhood educational programs are offered to children to help them get the best possible start in life, while, at the same time, parents are offered training to help enhance their parenting skills, and education, literacy, or job training to help them become economically self-sufficient. These multistrategy programs are relatively new additions to the broad array of programs designed to serve children and families, but many have already been the subjects of fairly sophisticated evaluations. This article describes two-generation programs and how they differ from earlier single-focus approaches to serve children and families. In-depth descriptions of six premier two-generation programs are used to illustrate the variability in content and costs of these programs. The short-term results of these six programs are reviewed and indicate mixed and modest results in promoting the development of children and improving the parenting skills and economic self-sufficiency of parents. The results suggest several lessons, and the article concludes with recommendations for program improvement and future research.
- Published
- 1995
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