High Risk InfantsA psychotherapeutic technique for mother-child intervention: A case
study of a Japanese Down Syndrome child.
Chihoko Tanaka, Yoshiko Niwa
(IMHJ 1994, Vol. 15, No. 3 Fall, pp. 244-261)
Hana Clinic, Tokyo, JapanThe adaption process of mothers to the birth of children with Down
Syndrome and its psychotherapeutic assistance: A retrospective
approach
Chihoko Tanaka & Yoshiko Niwa
(IMHJ 1991, Vol. 12, No. 1 Spring, pp. 41-54)
Hana Clinic, Tokyo JapanMothers, fathers, and the criss of newborn intensive care
Glenn Affleck, Howard Tennen, Jonelle Rowe
(IMHJ 1990, Vol. 11, No. 1 Spring, pp. 12-25)
University of Connecticut Health CenterMothers of high-risk infants: Is their initial use of early intervention a
predictor of later coping?
Betty Jo McGrade, Glenn Affleck, Deborah Alen, & Maria McQueeney
(IMHJ 1985, Vol. 6, No. 1 Spring, pp. 13-20)
University of Connecticut School of MedicineInfant-mother attachment in children with failure to thrive
Mary J. Ward, Daniel B. Kessler, Susannah C. Altman
(IMHJ 1993, Vol. 14, No. 3 Fall, pp. 208-220)
Cornell University Medical CollegePsychotherapy in mothers of children with failure to thrive
H. Jonathan Polan, Michael D. Kaplan, Daniel B Kessler, Richard
Shindledecker, Mitchell Newmark, Daniel N. Stern, & Mary J. Ward
(IMHJ 1991, Vol. 12, No. 1 Spring, pp. 55-64)
Cornell University Medical CollegePaternal influences in non-organic failure to thrive: Implications for
psychosocial management.
Dennis Drotar and Lynne Sturm
(IMHJ 1987, Vol. 8, No. 1 Spring, pp. 37-50)
Case Western Reserve UniversityNon-organic failure to thrive: Deprivation or distortion?
Patricia M. Crittenden (IMHJ 1987, Vol. 8, No. 1 Spring, pp. 51-64)
University of MiamiAffective behavior and weight changes among hospitalized failure to
thrive infants.
Sheri Goldstein & Tiffany Field
(IMHJ 1985, Vol. 6, No. 4 Winter, pp. 187-194)
University of Miami Medical SchoolEarly and continuous action to prevent breakdown in the care of infants
and their families after serious neonatal episodes.
L. Ferrai, A. Pelafigue & R. Salbreus
(IMHJ 1988, Vol. 9, No. 1 Spring, pp. 82-110)
Institute de Puericulture de ParisThe influence of high-risk pregnancies and social support systems on
maternal perceptions of the infant.
Beatrice Priel & Bela Kantor
(IMHJ 1988, Vol. 9, No. 3 Fall, pp. 235-244)
Ben-Gurion UniversityTemperament and adaptation in infants and young children with disabilities
Bail S. Huntington & Rune J. Simeonson
(IMHJ 1993, Vol. 14, No. 1 Spring, pp. 49-60)
University of North Carolina, Chapel HillCoping behavior: Implications for disabled infants and toddlers
G. Gordon Williamson, Shirley Zeitlin, & Margery Szczpanski
(IMHJ 1989, Vol. 10, No. 1 Spring, pp. 3-13)
John F. Kennedy Medical CenterThe family practices of service providers for young handicapped children
Gerald Mahoney, Patricia S. O'Sullivan, & Sarah Fors
(IMHJ 1989, Vol. 10, No. 2 Summer, pp. 75-83)
University of Connecticut Health CenterClarifying the relation between degree of infant handicap and maternal
responsivity to infant communicative cues: Measurement issues
Paul Yoder (IMHJ 1986, Vol. 17, No. 4 Winter, pp. 281-293)
Vanderbilt UniversityClues in neonatal behavior for treatment of severely handicapped infants
and young children
Michele Bottos, Isabella D'eliso, & Stella Fantuzzi
(IMHJ 1986, Vol. 7, No. 4 Winter, pp. 294-301)
Centro Polivalente di Riabilitazione, VeneziaAssessment of parents' interactions with their developmentally delayed
infants.
Gere N. Clark & Ronald Seifer
(IMHJ 1985, Vol. 6, No. 4 Winter, pp. 214-225)
University of Illinois at ChicagoA father's response to the birth and death of a multi-handicapped child
Galen S. Marburg (IMHJ 1985, Vol. 6, No. 1 Spring, pp. 5-12)
Veterans Administration Medical Center, MassDifferential impact of parenting sick infants
Debra Bendell, Marylu Skinner Goldberg, Mary Theresa Urbando,
Richard C. Urbando, & Charles Bauer
(IMHJ 1987, Vol. 8, No. 1 Spring, pp. 28-36)
University of Miami, FLPerinatal loss and maternal attitudes toward the subsequent child.
Susan K. Theut, Howard A. Moss, Martha J. Zaslow, Beth A.
Rabinovich, Lara Levin, and John J. Bartko.
(IMHJ 1992, Vol. 13, No. 2 Summer, pp. 157-166)Infant psychiatry clinic grand rounds: Unresolved grief: A two-year old
brings her mother for treatment
Robert J. Harmon, Peggy J. Stall, Robert N. Emde, Clifford Siegel,
Ruth S. Kempe, Margaret Hitchman Margolin, Rex McGehee, and
Susan R. Fredrick (IMHJ 1990, Vol. 11, No. 2 Summer, pp. 97-112)
University of Colorado School of MedicineInterventions in early infancy
Tiffany Field (IMHJ 1992, Vol. 13, No. 4 Winter, pp. 329-336)
University of Miami Medical SchoolStrange bedfellows? Reproductive technology and child development
Kyle D. Pruett (IMHJ 1992, Vol. 16, No. 4 Winter, pp. 312-318)
Yale UniversityHelping health care staff deal with perinatal loss
Denise Defey (IMHJ 1995, Vol. 16, No. 2 Summer, pp. 102-111)
Montevideo, UruguayIssues in the identification and long-term management of Munchausen
by Proxy Syndrome within a clinical infant service.
Karlen Lyons-Ruth, Margaret Kaufman, Nina Masters, and Jenai Wu
(IMHJ 1991, Vol. 12, No. 4 Winter, pp. 309-320)
Harvard Medical SchoolMultiple birth and its influence on the mothering experience: A case study
of parent-infant psychotherapy with quadruplets.
Barbara Menzel & Diane Rotnem
(IMHJ 1990, Vol. 11, No. 1 Spring, pp. 26-36)
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New JerseyPrenatal intervention and support for low-income fathers
Annette E. Pfannenstiel & Alice Sterling Honig
(IMHJ 1991, Vol. 12, No. 2 Summer, pp. 103-115)
SUNY Health Sciences Center