YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :High Risk Family Assessment Violence
Essays 661 - 690
in treatment involves helping the patient return to the community. If rehabilitation has occurred for the most part in the home, t...
In five pages this paper discusses how the family unit has declined as television watching by family members has significantly inc...
In twelve pages this paper examines the all too common scenario of African American families without custodial fathers in terms of...
In seven pages traditional and contemporary Chinese families are compared in terms of marriage customs, power according to gender,...
Family and its importance to these world cultures are examined in a paper consisting of five pages. Six sources are cited in the ...
responsibility for child-rearing or housekeeping duties traditionally assigned to women (Luker, 2003). To complicate things still ...
both conflict and methods for resolution. Experiential therapy, then, is a process that allows families to open channels of inter...
If the husband is bedridden, ideally both of the older children should be in daycare (the oldest in after school care), but there ...
as separation and the breakdown of subsystems. This will continue until a new point of equilibrium is reached (Ackerman, 1985). ...
opportunity to concentrate on the task of child rearing. However, as Scwartz and Scott (2003) indicate, this stereotypical ninetee...
Actions and behaviors therefore are at least partially the result of the inherent relationships that exist within the family. ...
to the position of trying to improve the clients ability to change and control themselves, self-organization also lined to circula...
caused by the illnesses the may then have a negative physiological backlash on the patient. For other condition it may be the ro...
claims that the Vietnam soldiers had a 72 percent higher rate of suicide than their other military counterparts (Bower, 1987, p. 1...
stressors that are present at any given time are more than can be mitigated for through the general adaptations and minor changes ...
stress, particularly when the stress also involves a violation of social "norms." Some have suggested that Gregors "metamorphosis"...
and the church" and encompasses "spirituality, social support, and traditional, non-biomedical health and healing practices," whic...
that others do not. We need to understand the obstacles these children face in order to help them and by doing so, help society as...
includes seniors centers focusing on social and wellness programs and activities, adapting healthcare needs to those standards rat...
parents and an undertanding of the roots of conflict. Marsolinis (2000) perspective is one that comes from the value in applyin...
as the "irregular household structures-of the working poor" (Nelson, 2006). For example, one young working mother relies on her mo...
traditional nuclear families (Bowen). 3. How does family assessment influence health-seeking behaviors among individuals? Asses...
begins using drugs, stealing, experimenting with sex, and seeking out more radical means of self mutilation. Each of these change...
steps we take to make them work, blended families raise problems regarding appropriate social roles. Individuals, after all, are ...
generation, perceiving life and important family relationships very differently. They do not come from the same position, in terms...
the woman more "desirable" and therefore more likely to marry and not be a burden on her family any longer (Family Structure, 2003...
or wages in order to sustain the family lifestyle. In all cases, middle and upper class children who do not have the same labor ob...
1992). Women are those primarily affected by the private sphere support group, however in order to be eligible for support, certai...
new research is needed in the area. The style of the literature review is appropriate in that the author divides it into we...
transformation, characterized by the organization of hierarchical positions and recurring transaction patterns between and among t...