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Addresses the physical and emotional consequences of interpersonal violence on women entering motherhood
Covers current research as well as clinical implications, making it attractive to researchers and clinicians alike
Presents a global perspective on women's trauma
Auteur
Dr. Muzik is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Michigan where she conducts research and provides clinical care. Dr. Muzik is Medical Director of the Women & Infants Mental Health Program. She completed her medical training in psychiatry at the University of Vienna in Austria, and at the University of Michigan in the United States. She is a certified psychotherapist in Psychoanalytic Therapy through the Vienna Psychoanalytic Institute, a certified mother-infant psychotherapist through the University of Michigan Infant Mental Health Certificate Program, and a research fellow with the International Psychoanalytic Association. Dr. Muzik also holds a master's degree in Clinical Research and Statistical Analysis from the University of Michigan, School of Public Health. Her research focuses on depression and anxiety during pregnancy and postpartum, and its impact on parenting and child outcomes. She is interested in the impact of maternal/family psychiatric illness on early child development as well as in interactions between biological vulnerability and environmental factors on infant emotional and biological development.
Dr. Rosenblum is a clinical and developmental psychologist and Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Michigan's Department of Psychiatry, where together with Dr. Muzik she directs the Women and Infants Mental Health Program. Dr. Rosenblum co-directs the Infant and Early Childhood Clinic, the specialty clinic within the Department of Psychiatry that provides assessment and treatment to infants, toddlers, and young children who have been exposed to trauma and/or adversity, and she regularly consults with professionals across systems working with children affected by trauma, including lawyers, judges, caseworkers, primary care providers, and educators. Dr. Rosenblum's research, teaching and clinical work focus on parenting, infant, and early childhood mental health. Dr. Rosenblum has published numerous peer-review articles and book chapters, and she directs a number of federally- and foundation-funded studies with a particular focus on infancy, early childhood, military/veteran families, and support for parents with mental illness. Many of the families she works with have experienced significant disruptions, including separations, trauma, and/or loss. In these contexts her work focuses on strengthening protective factors to enhance family resilience.
Contenu
Part 1. Introduction-. Mental Health Problems Among Childbearing Women: Historical Perspectives and Social Determinants.- Part 2. Trauma and Consequences for Mother and Child.- Childhood Maltreatment and Motherhood: Implications for Maternal Well-Being and Mothering.- The effects of intimate partner violence on the early caregiving system.- The Slippery Slope of Birth Trauma.- Reproductive Loss and its Impact on the Next Pregnancy.- Part 3. The Biological Impact of Maternal Trauma.-Trauma Exposure: Consequences to Maternal and Offspring Stress Systems.- Maternal trauma and related psychopathology: Consequences to parental brain functioning associated with caregiving.- Part 4. Healing and Recovery.- Resilience, Recovery, and Therapeutic Interventions for Peripartum Women with Histories of Trauma.- Parenting in the context of trauma: Dyadic interventions for trauma-exposed parents and their young children.- Enhancing Emotion Regulation: The TARGET Approach to Therapy with TraumatizedYoung Mothers.- Mom Power: A Parenting Group Intervention for Mothers with Trauma Histories.- Project BRIGHT: An Attachment-Based Intervention for Mothers with Substance Use Disorders and their Young Children.- Survivor Mom's Companion: A Population-Level Program for Pregnant Women Who are Survivors of Childhood Maltreatment: The Need for a Public Health Approach to Addressing Unresolved Maternal Trauma.- Military Moms: Deployment and reintegration challenges to motherhood.- Maternal experience of neonatal intensive care unit hospitalization: Trauma exposure and psychosocial responses.