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Riverview Hospital for Children and Youth
A Culture of Promise
Series: The Driftless Connecticut Series & Garnet Books
Sales Date: 2015-10-06
A personal history of the groundbreaking children's mental health facility
Prior to 1972, visitors to Connecticut state mental hospitals might have noticed a six-year-old chronically depressed girl crouching in the corner of a chaotic cafeteria, or a seven-year-old autistic boy sleeping on a cot next to a seventy-year-old schizophrenic man. Riverview Hospital for Children and Youth tells the story of one of the first milieu based therapeutic hospitals specializing in children's care, located in Middletown, Connecticut. Richard J. Wiseman, its first superintendent, offers his own story and treatment philosophy alongside the voices of the many people who worked tirelessly to free children from an adult mental health facility, and to treat children as children. This important book provides access to decades of experiences, useful tools, and knowledge regarding the treatment of children requiring mental health care. Weaving first-person narrative and interviews with staff, administrators, and patients, Riverview Hospital for Children and Youth testifies to the passion and determination it took to spring children from an adult mental health ward and bring them into a place of their own. A companion ebook comprised of three original staff manuals will also be available.
Foreword, by Louis Ando
Author's Note and Acknowledgments
On the Way Up the Hill
A Place to Start
A New Home
A New Direction
Children Do Not Belong in Psychiatric Hospitals!
A New Name
The Evolution of a Milieu
Children's School
Recreation in the Children's Unit
Adolescence
Teamwork
Identity
Post-Merger
A Broader View of Change
Addressing the Mood in the Milieu
The Next Generation
APPENDIXES
Excerpts from The Behavioral Learning Environment Unit: BLEU—A Handbook and Training Manual Prepared for the Staff at Connecticut Valley Hospital Children's Unit
Excerpts from ABCD Program—Staff Manual
Excerpts from Sunburst Program Manual
Notes
Bibliography
RICHARD J. WISEMAN is one of the pioneers of modern mental health treatment for children, and was the first in Connecticut to argue that autism was a developmental, not a psychiatric, disorder. His work was an important factor in the State of Connecticut's decision to shift childcare, for children with autism, to the newly named Department of Developmental Disabilities.
"There is much to recommend about the book, its message, and what was learned through trial-and-error, dedication, and forward thinking. I suspect mental health students, educators, and psychology practitioners will enjoy reading Wiseman's journey."
~James K. Luiselli, New England Psychologist
"Riverview Hospital offers readers an inside view of this leading psychiatric hospital for children. As someone with four decades of experience in the private sector, I gained a fresh perspective on how complex and political the public sector is, and new respect for the challenges faced. An excellent resource for students as well as anyone with an interest in the history of children's services."
~David Tompkins, vice president of program services, Klingberg Family Centers
"A fascinating and profound look at the early development of a 'continuum of care' model for children's mental health. Dick Wiseman provides an engaging voice for the staff, administrators, and officials working with the children at Riverview. His understanding and quest for a healthy therapeutic milieu is captured nicely for us through his insight that 'challenges lead to growth, and growth leads to higher developmental levels, which leads to change.' The stories and documentation are recommended learning opportunities for students and professionals in the field of children's services. I so enjoyed the journey."
~Gregory Horne, professor emeritus of Psychology and Human Services, Middlesex Community College
"Riverview Hospital offers readers an inside view of this leading psychiatric hospital for children. As someone with four decades of experience in the private sector, I gained a fresh perspective on how complex and political the public sector is, and new respect for the challenges faced. An excellent resource for students as well as anyone with an interest in the history of children's services."
~David Tompkins, vice president of program services, Klingberg Family Centers