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systemagazin Zeitschriftenarchiv: Journal of Family Therapy Heft 3/1999
1/1999 - 2/1999  - 3/1999 - 4/1999 - Übersicht


Jenny, Altschuler & Anne McFadyen (1999): Editorial. In: Journal of Family Therapy 21 (3): S. 239-241 Rolland, John S. (1999): Parental illness and disability: a family systems framework. In: Journal of Family Therapy 21 (3): S. 242-266.

abstract: Coping with the strains and uncertainties of parental illness and disability can be a monumental challenge. The Family Systems-Illness Model offers a psychosocial map to address this challenge and make the inevitable strains more manageable. Attending to the longitudinal psychosocial pattern of a condition within a multigenerational, life cycle and belief system context can provide the kind of structure - a common language that facilitates collaborative, creative problem solving and quality of life for families where a parent has a serious health problem. Some of the major challenges in families facing parental illness are addressed.


Dale, Barbara & Jenny Altschuler (1999): ‚In sickness and in health‘: the development of alternative discourses in work with families with parental illness. In: Journal of Family Therapy 21 (3): S. 267-283.

abstract: This paper outlines the development of clinical understanding and a clinical model for working with families with parental physical illness. The lens of gender to explore clinical process reveals blind spots and can uncover alternative perspectives on parental illness. The authors look at the very different needs of children and parents for coherent explanations. The impact of this way of working on therapists and the importance of reflecting teams, as part of the process of working collaboratively with families, are addressed.


Miller, Riva & Derval Murray (1999): The impact of HIV illness on parents and children, with particular reference to African families. In: Journal of Family Therapy 21 (3): S. 284-302.

abstract: This paper looks at the effects of HIV infection on parenting and family relationships, focusing on the issues this presents for HIV families from sub-Saharan Africa, both here in the UK and in their countries of origin. We describe how we have experienced and dealt with some of the dilemmas facing parents and the context in which our service is offered. Despite the wide range of ethnic and cultural backgrounds, many common parenting issues and themes transcend cultural differences.


Aldridge, Jo & Saul Becker (1999): Children as carers: the impact of parental illness and disability on children‘s caring roles. In: Journal of Family Therapy 21 (3): S. 303-320.

abstract: The nature and extent of young caring in the UK continue to be a feature of a growing number of research programmes motivated by a children and carers‘ rights philosophy. However, the context in which young caring occurs as a result of parental ill-health or disability can only be fully understood by examining the findings and implications of medical research into parental impairment, and the social movements that have served to re-define the concept of ‚disability‘ in society. This paper examines the arguments put forward by medical researchers, by those proposing a social model of disability and by those who have specifically investigated the conditions and experiences of young carers. It argues that children‘s caring roles within families where there is parental illness or disability need to be understood not only as a reflection of the nature of the medical condition itself, but as a consequence of complex family, social and economic processes. A ‚whole family‘ approach is proposed, where the needs of children and parents are respected and responded to.


McFadyen, Anne (1999): New mothers and their babies: attachment in the face of maternal life-threatening illness. In: Journal of Family Therapy 21 (3): S. 321-336.

abstract: Life-threatening illness in the mothers of babies or young children is rare. Its impact is discussed in this paper, which focuses on attachment theory as a foundation for work in this area. A single case study is used to illustrate the potential conflicts and dilemmas for professionals caring for babies and their families in this situation.


Published by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons



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