Couples and families face daunting challenges as they cope with serious illness and disability. This book gives clinicians a roadmap for helping affected individuals and their loved ones live well with a wide range of child, adult, and later-life conditions. John S. Rolland describes ways to intervene with emerging challenges over the course of long-term or life-threatening disorders. Using vivid case examples, he illustrates how clinicians can help families harness their strengths for positive adaptation and relational growth. Rolland's integrative systemic approach is useful for preventive screening, consultations, brief counseling, more intensive therapy, and multifamily groups, across health care settings and disciplines.
This book significantly advances the clinical utility of Rolland's earlier landmark volume, Families, Illness, and Disability and is useful for couple and family therapists and counselors, clinical psychologists, social workers, pastoral counselors, nurses, and psychiatrists. It may serve as a primary or supplemental text for courses on families and health within family therapy, social work, psychology, and nursing programs.
I. The Family Systems Illness Model: The Experience of Illness and Disability
II. The FSI Model: Working with Couples and Families
III. Phase-Related Issues and Specific Populations: Practice Guidelines
IV. The Clinician’s Experience and Collaborative Practice
References
Index
""Rolland takes readers on a compelling journey into the lives of couples and families coping with serious and chronic illness. He grounds his work in the empirical literature and in his extensive clinical experience. I recommend this book for clinical graduate school programs and medical residencies.""
- Cleveland G. Shield, PhD, Dept of Human Development & Family Studies & Purdue Center for Cancer Research, Purdue University
""This book is a treasure. Rolland has put a career's worth of insight, wisdom, craft, and humanity into every chapter. All clinicians who work with couples and families will benefit immensely from reading this important, up-to-date work.""
- William J. Doherty, PhD, Department of Family Social Science, University of Minnesota