Greenwald's book combines the best elements of short-term, solution-oriented therapeutic approaches with focused trauma work. It offers a HIGHLY PRACTICAL, STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE to help individuals with assorted acting-out behaviors, and well-thought-out protocols to guide the clinician through the assessment and treatment process. The book is rich with specific, detailed and believable case examples. The book SHOULD BE REQUIRED READING for any clinician working with difficult populations, including troubled adolescents and perpetrators of family violence. Unlike traditional models of domestic violence treatment, Greenwald's sequential model assumes that perpetrators are often victims themselves and that their needs and goals must be taken into account. It is BASED ON SOUND RESEARCH and has much in common with my own three-phase approach for domestic violence work. I highly recommend it.
-- John Hamel, LCSW, author of Gender Inclusive Treatment of Intimate Partner Abuse and Family Interventions in Domestic Violence
Dr. Greenwald has developed a solid, user-friendly treatment to help a vulnerable population of clients who are so in need of expert care. His innovative approach addresses major treatment obstacles such as low motivation, poor self-discipline, and posttraumatic stress, while also incorporating more standard interventions such as relapse prevention. The practical, down-to-earth interventions offer a wealth of options that can become part of the clinician's toolkit. This book has GREAT POTENTIAL TO HELP CLIENTS and to guide those who treat them.
-- Lisa M. Najavits, PhD, professor of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine; author of Seeking Safety: A Treatment Manual for PTSD and Substance Abuse
This work book is TRULY GROUND-BREAKING. It teaches a model and overall discipline that closely parallels the model that has evolved at our agency. Those of us who understand the full spectrum of the impact of traumatic events on humanity would logically evolve mental health service delivery systems in similar ways, as healing the wounded soul definitely requires a different approach than what has become usual and customary. Dr. Greenwald's VERY PRACTICAL AND USEFUL BOOK WILL BECOME A CLASSIC for all those who help people whose trauma has been so long unresolved that their behaviors have become problematic. This is another book that should be required reading for anyone that helps children in the juvenile system or adults mandated to treatment.
-- Teresa Descilo, MSW, CTS, executive director, Victim Services-The Trauma Resolution Center, Miami, FL
Treating Problem Behaviors by Ricky Greenwald is a wonderful manual for those mental health clinicians who want to help youths in serious trouble and difficulty. As the author appreciates, there is a strong connection between psychiatric trauma and mental health problems. This manual will guide front line clinicians as they approach these difficult to engage youths. The field of developmental psychology and psychiatry is in great need of efforts such as this one: a clinician/expert trained in research methods instilling the front line clinician with knowledge which WILL LEAD TO BETTER PRACTICE and the generation of practice based evidence which complements findings from clinical trials. Highly recommended.
-- Hans Steiner, MD, professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Child & Adolescent Psychiatry and Human Development, Stanford University School of Medicine
Understanding the role of trauma is often the key that unlocks the mystery of psychological and behavioral problems in kids. Ricky Greenwald's book does an excellent job of showing the practitioner why this key works and how to use it effectively in the therapeutic process. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND IT.
-- James Garbarino, PhD, director, Loyola University Chicago's Center for the Human Rights of Children; author, Lost Boys: Why Our Sons Turn Violent and How We Can Save Them and See Jane Hit: Why Girls Are Growing More Violent and What We Can Do About It