Clinical and Forensic Interviewing Sattler Jerome
Clinical and Forensic Interviewing Sattler Jerome
Clinical and Forensic Interviewing Sattler Jerome
Jerome M. Sattler
Copyright 1998, 1,151 pages
Illustrated, hardbound, 8.5 x 11
ISBN 0-9618209-4-2
"Jerome Sattler's Clinical and Forensic Interviewing of Children and Families is by far the
best and most comprehensive resource on clinical interviewing with children and families that
has ever been available. This exciting new volume by a master clinician-scholar is a
contribution that will prove to be enormously useful to professionals and students who work
with children and families. This book fills a large void in the field and is bound to become an
instant classic."
- Eric J. Mash, University of Calgary, Canada
"Clinical and Forensic Interviewing of Children and Families will prove to be a landmark
publication with respect to the interview process. It is a superb vehicle for teaching the skills
required for successful interviewing. It is incredibly refreshing to have the opportunity to
review a work that obviously has required much time, much research, much scholarship, and
is definitely a labor of love. Dr. Sattler, thank you for a major contribution."
- Paula K. Lundberg-Love, University of Texas, Tyler
"Clinical and Forensic Interviewing of Children and Families is destined to be the classic text
in its field. The book is both rich in facts and wise in counsel. The breadth of Dr. Sattler's
scholarship is virtually unparalleled, and his acknowledgments make it quite clear that
impressive specialists in nearly every field covered have cross-checked his work. The
subsidiary materials consisting of figures, tables, and interview questionnaires will be
priceless for those learning to interview as well as for professionals in the field."
- William A. Hillix, San Diego State University
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Jerome M. Sattler
Copyright 1998, 1,151 pages
Illustrated, hardbound, 8.5 x 11
ISBN 0-9618209-4-2
SECTION I. GENERAL PRINCIPLES AND TECHNIQUES OF INTERVIEWING AND
REPORTING
Interviewing Parents
Interviewing Teachers
Interviewing the Family
Closing the Initial Interview
Evaluating the Initial Interview
Thinking Through the Issues
Summary
Post-Assessment Interview
Follow-Up Interview
Thinking Through the Issues
Summary
Black Americans
Hispanic Americans
Native Americans
Asian Americans
Refugees
Intervention Considerations
Semistructured Interviews
Recommendations for Interviewing Ethnic Minority Children and Their Families
Thinking Through the Issues
Summary
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Conduct Disorder and Oppositional Defiant Disorder
Depression
Anxiety Disorders An Overview
Separation Anxiety Disorder
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Dissociative Identity Disorder
Thinking Through the Issues
Summary
Autistic Disorder
Mental Retardation
Specific Learning Disability
Visual Impairment
Hearing Impairment
Thinking Through the Issues
Summary
13. Children and Families Facing Bereavement or the Threat of Suicide
Bereavement
Suicide
Thinking Through the Issues
Summary
Adoption
Divorce and Custody Evaluations
Homeless Families and Children
Thinking Through the Issues
Summary
17. Interviewing and Interventions for Specific Pediatric Health-Related Disorders, Part 1
Pain
Asthma
Diabetes
Childhood Cancer
HIV and AIDS
Pediatric Headaches
Failure to Thrive
Thinking Through the Issues
Summary
18. Interviewing and Interventions for Specific Pediatric Health-Related Disorders, Part 2
EPILOGUE
APPENDIXES
GLOSSARY
REFERENCES
NAME INDEX
SUBJECT INDEX
PREFACE
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CLINICAL AND FORENSIC INTERVIEWING OF
CHILDREN AND FAMILIES: Guidelines for the Mental
Health, Education, Pediatric, and Child Maltreatment Fields
Jerome M. Sattler
Copyright 1998, 1,151 pages
Illustrated, hardbound, 8.5 x 11
ISBN 0-9618209-4-2
Clinical and Forensic Interviewing of Children and Families is designed to help students and
professionals in human services fields become competent clinical assessment and forensic
interviewers. The impetus for writing this text was my renewed appreciation of the
importance of the interview as an assessment tool. The human services field is evolving
rapidly. More and more children are being referred for custody evaluations, maltreatment,
depression, suicide attempts, and health-related conditions. Homelessness, AIDS, substance
abuse, and crisis intervention have become extremely important areas for mental health
professionals. The increase in managedhealth care programs places greater demands on all
clinicians to provide time-limited, focused, and cost-effective service. There is less time and
money for intense diagnostic study, despite the potential benefits. A text that addressed these
topics was clearly needed.
This book is based on the philosophy that one cannot be a competent clinical
assessment or forensic interviewer unless he or she has the relevant information
about the child's presenting problem, as well as knowledge of the interventions that
might help the child and family. Therefore, in this text, you will find information
about the major problem areas encountered by children and their families and about
interventions, along with suggestions for conducting interviews. You should
consult additional references about the child's problem areas, as needed.
This book will benefit students and professionals in all human services fields,
including social work, clinical psychology, counseling psychology, school
psychology, rehabilitation psychology, health psychology, pediatric psychology,
psychiatry, education, and speech therapy. In addition, professionals in such allied
fields as medicine, nursing, law, and law enforcement have much to gain from
reading it. This text provides both theoretical and practical guidelines to help
students and professionals develop skills in interviewing children, adolescents,
parents, families, and teachers.
One entire section of the book is devoted to the assessment of child maltreatment.
Two considerations led me to give extensive coverage to this area. First, child
maltreatment is of increasing concern to human services workers, as billions of
dollars are being spent by governmental agencies for the investigation, care, and
treatment of children who are alleged to have been maltreated or who have been
maltreated. Second, the interview plays a critical role in the assessment of child
maltreatment. The more you know about the pitfalls of interviewing in cases of
child maltreatment, the more effective you will be in interviewing children and in
presenting your findings in any criminal proceedings, in which interview
techniques are sometimes challenged. The material in Section V will give you a
foundation for understanding child maltreatment and a foundation for conducting
child maltreatment interviews.