gogo
Amazon cover image
Image from Amazon.com

Reproductive trauma : psychotherapy with infertility and pregnancy loss clients / Janet Jaffe and Martha O. Diamond.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, c2011.Edition: 1st edDescription: ix, 275 p. ; 26 cmISBN:
  • 9781433808418
  • 9781433808418 (hardcover : print ed.)
  • 1433808412 (hardcover : print ed.)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: OriginalDDC classification:
  • 616.69208
LOC classification:
  • .J325 2011
Online resources: Also issued in print.
Contents:
The reproductive story -- Developmental tasks of adulthood : losses of opportunity -- When the reproductive story goes awry : trauma and loss -- Techniques of assessment and treatment -- Grieving a reproductive loss -- The impact of reproductive challenges on intimate relationships -- At a crossroad : facing third-party reproduction and adoption -- Self-disclosure, transference, and counter-transference -- Adjuncts to therapy and complementary care -- Additional concerns -- Medical, moral, and ethical complications -- Pregnancy after infertility and reproductive loss.
Summary: "Since the birth of the first in vitro fertilization baby 30 years ago, assisted reproductive technology continues to advance exponentially. Despite this progress in medical technology, the psychological understanding of related emotional, ethical, and moral dilemmas needs to be further explored. Written by specialists in the field of reproductive counseling, this volume will help clinicians to understand and effectively treat the unique needs of clients who have experienced adverse reproductive events, which include infertility, miscarriage, perinatal or newborn loss, and premature or other complicated births. Illustrated with numerous clinical examples, this volume will help mental health professionals gain both insight and clinical skill in working with this complex and growing clinical population. The rapid advance in reproductive medicine has created options for family building that would have seemed like science fiction only a few decades ago, and thousands of couples worldwide have benefited from it. Medical progress has not been limited to infertility treatment. Premature births, which used to claim the lives of so many infants, can now be routinely managed, and even infants born as early as 24 weeks can sometimes survive. The scientific understanding of miscarriages, genetic anomalies, hormonal imbalances, and menopause has done much to help patients whose reproductive health has suffered. But along with the medical technology, a multitude of emotional, ethical, and moral dilemmas have emerged, and the psychological understanding of the impact of such technology has lagged sorely behind. Although many books have been written about how to get pregnant, or as personal journals of a reproductive difficulty, or about how to cope with stress, relatively little has been written to help mental health professionals understand and effectively treat patients in therapy who have reproductive problems. This book is written to fill that gap"--Publicity materials. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).
No physical items for this record

IT Carlow ebook

APA ebook

Includes bibliographical references and index.

The reproductive story -- Developmental tasks of adulthood : losses of opportunity -- When the reproductive story goes awry : trauma and loss -- Techniques of assessment and treatment -- Grieving a reproductive loss -- The impact of reproductive challenges on intimate relationships -- At a crossroad : facing third-party reproduction and adoption -- Self-disclosure, transference, and counter-transference -- Adjuncts to therapy and complementary care -- Additional concerns -- Medical, moral, and ethical complications -- Pregnancy after infertility and reproductive loss.

"Since the birth of the first in vitro fertilization baby 30 years ago, assisted reproductive technology continues to advance exponentially. Despite this progress in medical technology, the psychological understanding of related emotional, ethical, and moral dilemmas needs to be further explored. Written by specialists in the field of reproductive counseling, this volume will help clinicians to understand and effectively treat the unique needs of clients who have experienced adverse reproductive events, which include infertility, miscarriage, perinatal or newborn loss, and premature or other complicated births. Illustrated with numerous clinical examples, this volume will help mental health professionals gain both insight and clinical skill in working with this complex and growing clinical population. The rapid advance in reproductive medicine has created options for family building that would have seemed like science fiction only a few decades ago, and thousands of couples worldwide have benefited from it. Medical progress has not been limited to infertility treatment. Premature births, which used to claim the lives of so many infants, can now be routinely managed, and even infants born as early as 24 weeks can sometimes survive. The scientific understanding of miscarriages, genetic anomalies, hormonal imbalances, and menopause has done much to help patients whose reproductive health has suffered. But along with the medical technology, a multitude of emotional, ethical, and moral dilemmas have emerged, and the psychological understanding of the impact of such technology has lagged sorely behind. Although many books have been written about how to get pregnant, or as personal journals of a reproductive difficulty, or about how to cope with stress, relatively little has been written to help mental health professionals understand and effectively treat patients in therapy who have reproductive problems. This book is written to fill that gap"--Publicity materials. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).

Also issued in print.

Electronic reproduction. Washington, D.C. American Psychological Association 2010 Available via World Wide Web Access limited by licensing agreement s2010 dcunns

Powered by Koha