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Faaliyetler |
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Ana Sayfa > Seçtiğiniz Site Kısmı > XIV. IFTA DÜNYA AİLE TERAPİSİ KONGRESİ > ORAL PRESENTATIONS > |
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Uprooting and Mental Health Crisis on Campus: International Students as a Population at Risk
Many universities and other institutions of higher education have large and often increasing numbers of international students, who migrate temporarily to study in countries other than their homeland. The most striking characteristic of international students is their diversity.
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Cultural Context Model Treatment for Trauma
In a global crisis the systemic reverberation is felt within most communities. However, the families and communities disproportionately impacted are those least buffered and most vulnerable
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Positivist View of Crisis: A Multidimensional Approach
The impact of both man-made and natural crises has been studied extensively. Much of this research has focused on the negative aspects of crisis, such as the development of psychological disorders.
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The Construction of Reality by People Suffering with Eating Disorders - Systemic Interventions Constructing Other Realities (Archaic Bon-Ton) for People with Eating Disorders
Different eating disorders such as anroexia, bulimia and binge or compulsive eating are increasingly noticed in countries of modern civilization where, above all women show troublesome patterns of eating
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A Turkish Foundation Course in Family Therapy and Results of Its Built-In Evaluation
When a trainer meets those wishing to train in family therapy the aim is to form a partnership with a common goal: to impart to the trainees the knowledge and skills that will enable them to practice as competent therapists. Therapists need to be “more human than otherwise”, to quote Harry Stack Sullivan, and paraphrase Salvadore Minuchin.
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Allowing Clients to Choose Their Preferable Therapy Tools Allowing Clients to Choose Their Preferable Therapy Tools
The present study describes an approach in which clients who are referred to therapy, choose the type of therapy with which they prefer to be treated.
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Abuse an Families of Alcoholics: Multiple Addictions
In alcoholic family systems coexist at least two addictions: emotional neglect and abuse, with the existing alcohol addiction. Physical abuse happens very often; therefore, every member is a victim and abuser, only the roles change in specific way: It begins by being a vistim in child hood, later on, a vistim besomes an abuser by growing up.
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Empowering Addicted Families to Deal with Shame and Blame
The confrontation with the child's drug use has been obviously followed by the feeling-expressing catastrophe. The first contact with drug user's family illustrates multilevel disfunctionalities including mutual parental disqualification, a wide range of misunderstandings, luck of communication and negotiation skills, luck of trust and obviously high level of shame and blame.
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Model of Care for Families Living with HIV/AIDS in Resource-Limited Settings
Purpose: This model pretends to relate some contexts that have influence in families living with HIV/AIDS (FLHA) in order to mitigate impact in family life and ameliorate quality of life. Its theoretical basis is medical family therapy, biopsychosocial approach, systemic perspectives and postmodern thinking
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