The REACH Institute 

...The REsource for Advancing Children's Health

RESOURCES FOR FAMILIES

The REACH Institute has compiled a selection of resources that may help you learn more about children's emotional and behavioral disorders, and provide helpful information for parents, families, and professionals who care for our youth.  We have listed below links to various resources, including disorder profiles, treatment options, and REACH projects.  Click on each link to learn more. 

 

Featured Items

Making the System Work for Your Child With ADHD

Dr. Peter Jensen, the director of the Center for the Advancement of Children’s Mental Health, has written this invaluable guide for parents whose children suffer from ADHD. Through our website we are offering you the opportunity to buy Dr. Jensen's book from addwarehouse.com and make a $12.00 tax-deductible donation to our organization, all in one payment.

Purchase Dr. Jensen's book online.
Also available for list price from most major booksellers

This book, "Making the System Work for Your Child with ADHD," is the first volume in a series of 10 books that help parents identify what they need to do to "make the system work" when they have a child with a particular behavioral, emotional, or learning problem.  Dr. Jensen is the series editor and author of the first book.  In each of these ten books, parents share their stories with other parents of "what it takes" to make everything work, so that the child and family achieve their optimum potential.  To learn more about this book series, please click on the following link:  Book Series.

 

Get Smart About ADHD Report Card

Dr. Peter Jensen has just launched a brand new guide for parents of teens with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).  Available FREE by clicking on the link below, the Get Smart About ADHD Report Card teaches parents how to monitor the impact of ADHD on their teen's life and gives easy-to-follow tips on how parents can help their teen excel in school, at home and at play. The Report Card also allows parents to "grade" themselves on their level of involvement and advises them on how to get more engaged in helping their teen cope with the condition.

To download this helpful tool, please click on the following link: Get Smart About ADHD Report Card.

 

Profiles of Behavioral and Emotional Disorders

Anxiety disorders are illnesses that cause people to feel frightened...  (Read more)

Imagine living in a fast-moving kaleidoscope, where sounds, images, and   thoughts are constantly shifting... (Read more)

Isolated in worlds of their own, people with autism appear indifferent and remote and are unable to form emotional bonds with others... (Read more)

At least 2 million Americans suffer from bipolar disorder, also known as manic-depressive illness... (Read more)

Children with conduct disorder, CD, are those children who show persistent and serious patterns of misbehavior... (Read more)

Children with ODD show extreme levels of argumentativeness, disobedience, stubbornness, negativity, and provocation of others... (Read more)

Depressive disorders come in different forms, just as in the case with other illnesses such as severity, and persistence... (Read more)

Depressive disorders come in different forms, just as in the case with other illnesses such as severity, and persistence... (Read more)

 

Treatment Options

Please click on the following links for information on various medicational and therapeutic treatment options.

Family Education and Support

Children and adolescents with emotional and behavioral problems deserve access to the best possible mental health care. Dr. David Fassler has complied a list of specific tips and suggestions, which parents may find help as they advocate on behalf of their child's health.

 

REACH Parent Support Projects

Parent advocates are professional parents - often parents of children with mental illness - whose task it is to help parents of children with mental illness gain access to services and develop effective relationships with mental health providers or teachers.  Various projects, in New York, California, Texas, Utah, and Washington are now testing the effectiveness of a parent empowerment manuals and training with groups of parent advisors. The main goal of the these projects is to improve the communication between parents, providers, and teachers towards the delivery of high quality care to children with emotional and behavioral disorders. 

Despite well-documented levels of emotional and behavioral problems in the nation’s youth, studies have repeatedly shown that most youth with mental health problems are not identified and do not receive needed care.  The main goal of this federally supported project is to develop key warning signs of children's mental health problems.  These signs were developed through scientific data analysis and through feedback from nationwide focus groups with parents, teachers, providers, and adolescents.


 
 
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