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Child Psychotherapy

Doll Family

Children experience unique and at times unbearable pressures and difficulties in today's world, including the separation and divorce of parents, scholastic achievement demands, developmental challenges, and the impact of trauma from accidents, illness, and abuse.

Child psychotherapy, in conjunction with sand play and other therapeutic techniques, helps children integrate their experiences, lends support for the strengths they possess, and helps them grow.

Parents are the primary support in a child's life. Psychotherapy needs to strengthen the child-parent relationship and must provide the family with tools for future growth./p>

Our treatment generally starts with a five-session assessment phase. At our initial meeting, parents have the opportunity to talk about their child's problems in detail and are also asked for a developmental and psychosocial history. Over the next three sessions, therapists have time to meet with child individually, observe her/his play and administer several brief psychological symptom inventories. The final session is a feedback session for the parents during which the therapist presents assessment findings and offers treatment recommendations. The goal is to reach a mutual decision about whether the child needs to be seen in outpatient psychotherapy or whether other supportive interventions will suffice.

Child DrawingTreatment sessions are weekly and each session is 50 minutes long. Child psychotherapy is rooted in play therapy: What talking is for adults, play is for children. Interactive play, sand play, and expressive art therapy in a non-judgmental and supportive space are the tools that help your child deal with the obstacles life presents. Generally speaking, child psychotherapy needs to be limited in nature, since a child's primary relationship is with the parent. In especially severe situations or in the treatment of chronic conditions, however, ongoing treatment may be appropriate.

Children grow in the presence of nurturing relationships. Psychotherapy therefore frequently makes it unnecessary to use medication in the psychological treatment of children. Meaningful family rhythms, a focus on family values away from excessive media exposure, and nutritional awareness are developed and strengthened in place of a reliance on medication.



Last modified on 01.13.10

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What's New
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Therapeuticum

Available Now:
Yoga for Kids

Individual yoga therapy sessions tailored to each child's needs. Designed to aid children's attention, relaxation, body awareness, and self-regulation. Call us at (916) 962-0222, extension 1# for more information.

KQED's Health Dialogues:
Talking About Pain

February 2010: KQED's Health Dialogues explores the latest research on chronic pain and how to treat it. Guests include Dr. Robert Brody, chief of the Pain Consultation Clinic at San Francisco General Hospital and Dr. Scott Fishman, chief of the Division of Pain Medicine at UC-Davis and president of the American Pain Foundation. Find more on the hourlong show here: "Health Dialogues: Pain."

L.A. Times: Families of autistic kids sue over cuts in therapy

February 2010: Families of autistic children in eastern Los Angeles County filed a class-action lawsuit today against the nonprofit agency that provides them with state-funded services, alleging that it had illegally discontinued their therapy for the disorder. The agency, the Eastern Los Angeles County Regional Center, informed more than 100 families late last summer that the therapy—known as the DIR model, or "developmental, individual difference, relationship-based"—was being eliminated for their children because of state budget cuts.

The therapy is the basis for a popular treatment known as Floortime, in which a therapist follows a child’s lead during play activities to build communication and social interaction skills.

Brain imaging may help diagnose autism

January 2010: Children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) process sound and language a fraction of a second slower than children without ASDs, and measuring magnetic signals that mark this delay may become a standardized way to diagnose autism. Researchers at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia reported their findings in an online article in the journal Autism Research.

"More work needs to be done before this can become a standard tool, but this pattern of delayed brain response may be refined into the first imaging biomarker for autism," said study leader Timothy P.L. Roberts, Ph.D., vice chair of Radiology Research at Children’s Hospital.