This article reports on a program that provides person-centered therapy for impoverished, maltreated, and neglected children and adolescents in Brazil. The program, which is staffed by volunteer therapists, started in 2002. Since then, nearly 100 hundred children and adolescents have received therapy in three institutions, one residential and two nonresidential. The general outcomes are described, leading to the conclusion that person-centered therapy is an effective strategy for the promotion of children’s and adolescents’ resilience, even in the context of multiple adverse conditions such as socioeconomic disadvantage, neglect, maltreatment, and abandonment. We conclude that the multicultural feature of person-centered therapy explains its effectiveness in this distinct population of Brazilian lower-class and non-White children and adolescents.
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Research Article|
July 01 2005
Person-Centered Therapy with Impoverished, Maltreated, and Neglected Children and Adolescents in Brazil Available to Purchase
Sílvia Helena Koller;
Sílvia Helena Koller
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande, do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil [email protected].
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Journal of Mental Health Counseling (2005) 27 (3): 225–237.
Citation
Elizabeth Schmitt Freire, Sílvia Helena Koller, Aline Piason, Renata Beatriz da Silva; Person-Centered Therapy with Impoverished, Maltreated, and Neglected Children and Adolescents in Brazil. Journal of Mental Health Counseling 1 July 2005; 27 (3): 225–237. doi: https://doi.org/10.17744/mehc.27.3.6p6qm84wqkkxp2a5
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