The impact of physical abuse on a child’s life can be far-reaching. It is especially devastating when a parent, the person a child depends on for protection and safety, becomes a danger. Some children develop traumatic stress reactions.
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Offers guidance to child-serving behavioral health organizations and professionals who serve communities affected by disaster and terrorism events.
CPC-CBT is a short-term, strengths-based therapy program for children ages 3-17 and their parents (or caregivers) in families where parents engage in a continuum of coercive parenting strategies.
Discusses military culture and the unique stressors faced by military families.
Assists agencies in weighing the pros and cons of adopting the TF-CBT treatment model.
Sex trafficking occurs among all socioeconomic classes, races, ethnicities, and gender identities and in urban, suburban, and rural communities across the US.
The PSI is a very well-researched and widely used measure of parenting stress, which has been shown to be sensitive to intervention effects across a variety of studies, populations, and treatments.
Research indicates that youth living with IDD experience exposure to trauma at a higher rate than their non-disabled peers.
Even in the closest of families, it is sometimes hard to remember that family members may have different reactions to the same traumatic event.
The Intervention Fact Sheets included on this page offer key information related to some of the interventions developed and used by members of the NCTSN.