Evidence-Informed Interventions for Court-Involved Families 2019
DOI: 10.1093/med-psych/9780190693237.003.0009
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“How Am I Supposed to Treat These Cases?” Working with Families Struggling with Entrenched Parent–Child Contact Problems

Abstract: Effective family interventions when children resist or reject contact with a parent in highly conflicted coparenting cases continue to pose significant challenges for mental health professionals, lawyers, and the courts. There is no consensus within the social science research literature on how best to identify, assess, and clinically respond to situations involving resist-refuse dynamics, which are multifaceted in causation and require clinical and often legal remedies. This chapter differentiates parent–chil… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Process models choose factors that describe the sequence or phases of an event or a procedure (e.g. a decision‐making tree for choosing between treatment options or sequencing the different components of treatment for children who are both estranged and alienated (Drozd & Olesen, ; Drozd, Saini, & Vellucci‐Cook, ; Fidler, Deutsch, & Polak, ; Greenberg et al, ; Polak, Altobelli, & Popielarczyk, ; Sullivan et al, ).…”
Section: Multi‐factor Theoretical Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Process models choose factors that describe the sequence or phases of an event or a procedure (e.g. a decision‐making tree for choosing between treatment options or sequencing the different components of treatment for children who are both estranged and alienated (Drozd & Olesen, ; Drozd, Saini, & Vellucci‐Cook, ; Fidler, Deutsch, & Polak, ; Greenberg et al, ; Polak, Altobelli, & Popielarczyk, ; Sullivan et al, ).…”
Section: Multi‐factor Theoretical Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Assessment of psychological safety requires information about the active emotional abuse of the other parent or child, including: intrusive psychological parenting that is harmful, intimidation, coercive control, repeated unsubstantiated allegations of sexual, physical, or emotional abuse, and severe untreated mental illness or substance abuse in a parent that results in unpredictable behaviors (Fidler & Ward, ). Based on the safety assessment, a determination must be made as to whether the intervention should include: (1) the whole family (Fidler, Deutsch, & Polak, ; Greenberg, Schnider, & Jackson, ; Ward, Deutsch, & Sullivan, 2017); (2) trauma treatment, e.g., https://www.apa.org/ptsd-guideline/treatments/; Drozd, Saini, & Vellucci‐Cook, (2019); and/or (3) parenting treatment (Sullivan, Deutsch, & Ward, ), as well as the order in which the intervention(s) should occur. Sometimes these treatments can occur simultaneously, while in other situations they will occur sequentially.…”
Section: Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Within the family work, psychoeducation focuses on the emotional, cognitive, social, and long‐term physical and emotional health implications that parental conflicts, disputes, and alienating and counter rejecting behaviors have on the child (Fidler et al, ). Psychoeducation on appropriate developmental expectations and consequences, authoritative (as opposed to permissive and authoritarian) discipline techniques, appropriate level of parental involvement, appropriate boundaries, and emotional regulation can all be addressed.…”
Section: Components Of Family Interventionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many professionals of all disciplines lack the professional training or experience to deal effectively with RRD cases, especially in the early stages (Bala & Slabach, ; Fidler, Deutsch, & Polak, ; Greenberg, Doi Fick, & Schnider, ; Greenberg, Schnider, & Jackson, ). Conflicts among professional roles may also lead to missed opportunities for intervention.…”
Section: Obstacles To Early Interventionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Resist‐refuse dynamics present complex challenges to professionals (Fidler, Deutsch, & Polak, ; Greenberg, Doi Fick, & Schnider, ; Greenberg, Schnider, & Jackson, ; Walters & Friedlander, ). It is common for professionals who provide services in these cases to lament that the family did not receive specialized services more quickly, that so much time and money was wasted on investigations that did not yield clear results, or on re‐litigation of every decision, recommendation or allegation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%