1999
DOI: 10.1177/1359104599004001002
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Child Psychotherapy in the Baby Clinic of a General Practice

Abstract: A B S T R A C TThis article is based on 20 years' experience of once-weekly work by a child psychotherapist in a general practice baby clinic. Mental illness makes up much of a general practitioner's workload, with 23% of the population of the UK consulting each year for such problems. Early intervention prevents later problems and this article describes the part that can be played by a child psychotherapist. Where infants are concerned, serious disturbances of feeding, sleeping, crying and difficulty in bondi… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Therapeutic observation is a clinical intervention derived from the infant and young child observations that Bick (1964) introduced as a core component of child psychotherapy training and are now part of many therapeutic and social care trainings (Daws, 1999;Wittenberg, 1999;Youell, 2005). For training observations, students are encouraged to find a baby or child to observe in ordinary, 'goodenough' family life, with all its intensity and ups and downs, but where the involvement of statutory services is not required.…”
Section: The Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therapeutic observation is a clinical intervention derived from the infant and young child observations that Bick (1964) introduced as a core component of child psychotherapy training and are now part of many therapeutic and social care trainings (Daws, 1999;Wittenberg, 1999;Youell, 2005). For training observations, students are encouraged to find a baby or child to observe in ordinary, 'goodenough' family life, with all its intensity and ups and downs, but where the involvement of statutory services is not required.…”
Section: The Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CAMHS workers who go out regularly into GP surgeries and community health clinics nearly always report that it profoundly changes their way of working. Those who have now developed 'portfolio' careers, with a mixture of work in primary and secondary care, find that each nourishes and informs the other (Daws, 1999).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%