Genograms: Assessment and Intervention

Portada
W. W. Norton & Company, 1999 - 234 páginas
Using famous families as case studies, this book explains how to draw, interpret and apply the genogram, a graphic way of organizing information gathered during a family assessment. It explains how the use of genograms can bring to light a family's history of divorse, suicide, or estrangement, revealing inter-generational patterns that are more than coincidental. Widely used in the training of health and mental health professionals, this work is an introduction to the principles of family systems theory. This edition has been updated and expanded to include developments in genogram use.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

Mapping Family Systems
1
25
2
3 McGoldrick family and network
7
Developing a Genogram to Track Family Patterns
13
Biological and adopted
19
Functioning
25
Repetitive patterns
31
Coincidences of Life Events
35
Family Relational Patterns and Triangles
101
Assessing Family Roles Functioning Balance Resilience
115
Using Genograms to Track Families through the Life Cycle
125
Clinical Uses of the Genogram
149
5565
165
95
172
Using Genograms for Family Research
176
Appendix
191

Anniversary Reactions
41
Interpreting Family Structure from Genograms
62
Marriage of two younger siblings
82
13 Adams family
88
16 Fernando Colons childhood knowledge of
94

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Información bibliográfica