TeaH (Turn ‘em around Healing): a therapeutic model for working with traumatised children on Aboriginal communities

Q2 Social Sciences
M. Moss, Anthony Duwun Lee
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Abstract Aboriginal children in Australia are over-represented in both the child protection and juvenile justice systems. Using Western therapeutic models of practice with Aboriginal people who live in remote communities can be highly problematic. Moreover, the historical legacy of past and present legislation, government interventions and racist service provision needs to be acknowledged and addressed prior to any service implementation. This paper presents a therapeutic model of practice that incorporates Aboriginal concepts of healing and spirit within a creative therapeutic framework. It will demonstrate how the model works through principles of community engagement and capacity building, enabling the provision of a culturally derived therapeutic intervention that involves a synergy of both Aboriginal- and Western-based healing practices. The findings from the implementation of the TeaH model affirm the need to incorporate Aboriginal concepts of healing, spirit and creative therapies into mainstream practice with Aboriginal people.
TeaH (Turn em around Healing):一种治疗土著社区受创伤儿童的治疗模式
摘要澳大利亚土著儿童在儿童保护和青少年司法系统中的代表性都过高。对生活在偏远社区的原住民使用西方治疗模式可能会产生很大问题。此外,在实施任何服务之前,都需要承认和解决过去和现在的立法、政府干预和种族主义服务提供的历史遗留问题。本文提出了一种治疗实践模式,将原住民的治愈和精神概念纳入创造性的治疗框架中。它将展示该模式如何通过社区参与和能力建设的原则发挥作用,从而能够提供一种文化衍生的治疗干预措施,该干预措施涉及原住民和西方治疗实践的协同作用。TeaH模型的实施结果证实,有必要将原住民的治愈、精神和创造性疗法概念纳入原住民的主流实践。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Children Australia
Children Australia SOCIAL WORK-
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