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New from the AAP!
Sound strategies
for connecting with
tough-to-reach teens
NEW!!
NEW
See inside for details... .
Learn how top youth-serving professionals
empower positive behavior change ... .
“An action-oriented road map
linking today ’s adults with
tomorrow’s successors . . . .
Reaching Teens is the art of
healing at its best.”
——Gail B. Slap, MD, MSc, FSAHM
NEW!!
NEW
• Quick-access how-to manual——
print or electronic
• Up-close-and-personal video
segments
• Ultraconvenient CME/CEU
opportunities
Here’s how to use strength-based communication strategies to help teens turn their lives around . . .
NEW!!
NEW
Reaching Teens
Strength-Based Communication Strategies to Build Resilience
and Support Healthy Adolescent Development
Editors: Kenneth R. Ginsburg, MD, MS Ed, FAAP, FSAHM, and Sara B. Kinsman, MD, PhD
T
his all-new multimedia resource embodies the
core belief that identifying, reinforcing, and
building on inherent strengths can facilitate positive
youth development.
Text and video components combine to show how
expert-tested, strength-based communication
approaches work to engage today’s teens.
Contributions from leading practitioners——plus
firsthand perspectives from teens——help you refine
your communication strategies and skills.
400+ video clips
Up to 65 CME/CEU credits
Visit www.aap.org/reachingteens.
Successful solutions targeting today’s
foremost youth-development issues
Created to benefit all professionals
who serve adolescents, Reaching
Teens explores and demonstrates
communication strategies for diverse
health care, counseling, youth program,
and educational settings.
Professionals and teens offer hard-won
insight on addressing behavioral and
emotional issues ... crisis management...
stress management...sexuality...grief...
depression...peer pressure. ..substance
abuse . . . sexual abuse . . . bullying——
virtually all the issues you’re most likely
to encounter.
Available as an AAP eBook!
Visit www.aapebooks.org for details.
The Society for Adolescent
Health and Medicine (SAHM)
on Reaching Teens
“This is an important project with
tremendous potential to engage
all youth-serving professionals
and better prepare them to
communicate with youth, foster
resilience, and promote positive
youth development.”
Debra K. Katzman, MD, FSAHM
SAHM President, 2013––2014
Read . . . Watch . . . Listen . . . Learn.
Reaching Teens includes
• 613-page print or electronic text——
Brief chapters provide context for
more detailed content in the videos.
AAP eBook edition enables point-andclick access to video materials.
• Cloud-based videos——Choose from
400+ segments expanding on the
text with in-depth explanations…liveaction demonstrations ...personal
accounts from program staff and
participants...and more.
• CME/CEU opportunities——Earn up
to 65 credits via chapter-specific
quizzes.
• Group discussion topics——Join
with your colleagues to evaluate
recommended approaches.
Bolster your communication savvy
with this multifaceted how-to resource.
Turn here for actionable advice and counsel
spanning your toughest youth communication
challenges.
• How to help teens recognize existing strengths
• How to empower wiser decisions and healthier
choices
• How to foster resilience-building
• How to ally with parents and support effective
parenting
• How to develop and prioritize your interventions
• How to help with special psychosocial and
environmental challenges
• How to de-escalate crisis situations
• How to establish appropriate boundaries
• How to serve populations with special health
care needs
• How to practice effective self-care that
enhances your ability to serve youth
...plus much more!
Available January 2014
Softcover——613 pages
Access to 400+ cloud-based videos
ISBN: 978-1-58110-748-7
eISBN: 978-1-58110-834-7
MA0647
Price: $299.95 Member Price: $279.95
Purchase price includes a license for one
user. To license for additional users or
groups, please email [email protected].
Continuing Education Credits
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) is accredited by the
Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME) to provide
continuing medical education (CME) for physicians.
The AAP designates this live activity for a maximum of 65 American
Medical Association (AMA) Physician’s Recognition Award (PRA) Category 1
Credit(s)™. Physicians should claim only the credit commensurate with the
extent of their participation in the activity.
This activity is acceptable for a maximum of 65 AAP credits. These credits
can be applied toward the AAP CME/Continuing Professional Development
(CPD) Award available to fellows and candidate members of the AAP.
This program is accredited for 65 National Association of Pediatric Nurse
Practitioners (NAPNAP) CE contact hours, of which 0 contain pharmacology
(Rx) content per the NAPNAP Continuing Education Guidelines.
The American Academy of Physician Assistants accepts certificates of
participation for educational activities certified for AMA PRA Category
1 Credit(s)™ from organizations accredited by the ACCME. Physician
assistants may receive a maximum of 65 hours of Category 1 Credit for
completing this program.
This program is approved by the National
Association of Social Workers (approval
#886367139-2021) for 60 social work CE
contact hours.
For more information and to register for education credits,
visit www.aap.org/reachingteens.
Reaching Teens TABLE OF CONTENTS
SECTION I ORIENTATION TO A STRENGTH-BASED APPROACH
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 The Journey From RiskFocused Attention to
Strength-Based Care
Chapter 3 How a Strength-Based
Approach Affects
Behavioral Change
Chapter 4 Who’s the Expert? Terms of
Engagement in Adolescent
Care
Chapter 5 The 7 Cs Model of Resilience
Chapter 6 The Impact of Trauma on Development and Well-being
Chapter 7 Wisdom From Model Strength-Based Programs That Work With Youth
Who Are Traditionally Labeled “At Risk”
SECTION 6 SUPPORTING EFFECTIVE PARENTING
Chapter 34 The Professional-Parent-Teen Partnership
Chapter 35 Preparing Parents for Their Children’s Adolescence
Chapter 36 Promoting Balanced
Parenting: Warmth,
Clear Boundaries, and
Effective Monitoring
Chapter 37 Delivering Upsetting
News to Parents:
Recognizing Their
Strengths First
Chapter 38 When Parents’
Resilience Reaches Its Limits
Chapter 39 The Importance of Self-care for Parents
SECTION 2 UNDERSTANDING
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
ADOLESCENTS AND THEIR WORLD
Chapter 8 Adolescent Development——
Stages, Statuses, and
Stereotypes
Chapter 9 The Adolescent World
Chapter 10 Sex(uality) Happens:
Fostering Healthy,
Positive (Female) Sexuality
Chapter 11 Male Sexuality
SECTION 3 CONNECTING WITH ADOLESCENTS AND THEIR FAMILIES
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Creating an Adolescent-Friendly Space and Service
Creating a Male Adolescent-Friendly Space
Setting the Stage for a Trustworthy Relationship
Body Language
SECTION 4 COMMUNICATING
WITH THE ADOLESCENT
Chapter 16 Core Principles on
Communicating With
Adolescents
Chapter 17 Integrating the 7 Cs of
Resilience Into Your
Clinical Practice
Chapter 18 The SSHADESS Screen: A Strength-Based Psychosocial Assessment
Chapter 19 Cultural Humility
Chapter 20 Boundaries
Chapter 21 Examining Our Unconscious Biases
Chapter 22 Trauma-Informed Practice: Working With Youth Who Have Suffered
Adverse Childhood (or Adolescent) Experiences
Chapter 23 De-escalation and Crisis Management When a Youth Is “Acting Out”
Chapter 24 Delivering Bad News to Adolescents
SECTION 5 EMPOWERING ADOLESCENTS TO CHANGE
Chapter 25 Addressing Demoralization: Eliciting and Reflecting Strengths
Chapter 26 Motivational Interviewing
Chapter 27 Health Realization——Accessing a Higher State of Mind No
Matter What
Chapter 28 Helping Adolescents Own Their Solutions
Chapter 29 Gaining a Sense of Control——One Step at a Time
Chapter 30 Strength-Based Interviewing: The Circle of Courage
Chapter 31 Stress Management and Coping
Chapter 32 Mindfulness Practice for Resilience and Managing Stress and Pain
Chapter 33 Helping Youth Overcome Shame and Stigma (and Doing Our Best to
Not Be a Part of the Problem)
SECTION 7 MENTAL, EMOTIONAL, AND BEHAVIORAL HEALTH
The Role of Lifestyle in Mental Health Promotion
Friendships and Peers
Depression
Anxiety
Somatic Symptoms
Grief
ADHD in Adolescents
Learning Differences
Perfectionism
Eating Disorders
Talking to Teens Who Are Using or Abusing Substances
Teen Pregnancy and Parenting
Teen Driving
Managing Electronic Media Use in the Lives of Adolescents
Helping Teens Cope With Divorce
Bullying
Unhealthy Relationships
Emotional, Physical, and Sexual Abuse
Youth Violence
SECTION 8 SERVING SPECIAL POPULATIONS
Chapter 59 Teens With Chronic Illness and Special Health Care Needs:
A Person-Centered Approach to Communication
Chapter 60 Transitioning From Pediatric to Adult Care
Chapter 61 Sexual and Gender Minority Youth
Chapter 62 Reaching Immigrant Youth
Chapter 63 America’s Children: The Unique Needs and Culture of Military Youth
Chapter 64 Foster Care Youth: Engaging Foster Care Youth Into Care
Chapter 65 Youth Infected With HIV
Chapter 66 Serving Homeless and Unstably Housed Youth
SECTION 9 SELF-CARE FOR PROVIDERS
Chapter 67 Healer, Heal Thyself: Self-care for the Caregiver
Chapter 68 Getting Out of the “Fast Lane”——More “Miles to the Gallon”?
Chapter 69 Have I Really Made a Difference? Trusting That Our Presence Matters
To view the collection of
videos and access educational
handouts, please visit
www.aap.org/reachingteens.
License Reaching Teens
for your institution
or program! Contact
[email protected]
for more information.
Reaching Teens CONTRIBUTORS
Liana R. Clark, MD, MSCE, FAAP
Adolescent Medicine Specialist, Philadelphia, PA; Medical
Director, Global Vaccines and Policy, Merck & Co, Inc.,
West Point, PA
Stephanie Contreras
Resilience Specialist, El Centro de Estudiantes,
Big Picture Philadelphia, PA
Alison Culyba, MD, MPH
Fellow, Adolescent Medicine, Craig-Dalsimer Division
of Adolescent Medicine, The Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia, PA
Angela Diaz, MD, MPH
Jean C. and James W. Crystal Professor, Departments
of Pediatrics and Preventive Medicine, Icahn School
of Medicine at Mount Sinai; Director, Mount Sinai
Adolescent Health Center, Mount Sinai Hospital, New
York, NY
Marcos O. Almonte, MDiv
Resilience Specialist, El Centro de Estudiantes,
Big Picture Philadelphia, PA
Renata Arrington-Sanders, MD, MPH, ScM, FAAP
Assistant Professor, Division of General Pediatrics and
Adolescent Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine,
Baltimore, MD
Colette (Coco) Auerswald, MD, MS, FSAHM
Associate Professor, University of California, BerkeleyUniversity of California at San Francisco Joint Medical
Program, Department of Community Health and Human
Development, UC Berkeley School of Public Health,
Berkeley, CA
Andrea R. Bailer, MSN, CRNP
Adolescent Nurse Practitioner, Advanced Practice Nurse
Manager, Nicholas and Athena Karabots Pediatric Care
Center, The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, PA
David L. Bell, MD, MPH
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics and Population and
Family Health, Department of Pediatrics/Heilbrunn
Department of Population and Family Health, Columbia
University Medical Center; Medical Director, The Young
Men’s Clinic, New York, NY
Sandra L. Bloom, MD
Codirector, Center for Nonviolence & Social Justice;
Associate Professor of Health, Management and
Policy, School of Public Health, Drexel University,
Philadelphia, PA
Larry K. Brendtro, PhD, LP
Dean, Starr Global Training Network, Albion, MI, Professor
Emeritus, Augustana College, Cofounder, Reclaiming
Youth International, Sioux Falls, SD
Kenisha Campbell, MD, MPH
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Perelman School of
Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Medical
Director, Adolescent Primary Care & Family Planning,
Nicholas and Athena Karabots Pediatric Care Center,
Craig-Dalsimer Division of Adolescent Medicine, The
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, PA
Marina Catallozzi, MD, MSCE
Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Columbia
University College of Physicians and Surgeons, Morgan
Stanley Children’s Hospital of New York; Assistant
Professor of Clinical Population and Family Health,
Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health,
New York, NY
Tonya A. Chaffee, MD, MPH, FAAP
Associate Clinical Professor of Pediatrics, University of
California, San Francisco; Director, Teen and Young Adult
Health Center; Medical Director, Child and Adolescent
Support Advocacy and Resource Center, San Francisco
General Hospital, San Francisco, CA
Nadia L. Dowshen, MD, FAAP, AAHIVS
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Perelman School of
Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania; Director
of Adolescent HIV Services, Craig-Dalsimer Division
of Adolescent Medicine, The Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia, PA
Paula M. Duncan, MD, FAAP
Professor of Pediatrics, University of Vermont College of
Medicine, Burlington, VT
Karyn E. Feit, LCSW
Adolescent Social Worker, Nicholas and Athena
Karabots Pediatric Care Center; Family Services,
Children’s Seashore House, The Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia, PA
Carol A. Ford, MD, FSAHM
Professor of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine
at the University of Pennsylvania; Chief, Craig-Dalsimer
Division of Adolescent Medicine, Orton Jackson Endowed
Chair in Adolescent Medicine, The Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia, PA
Barbara L. Frankowski, MD, MPH, FAAP
Professor, University of Vermont College of Medicine;
Pediatrician, Vermont Children’s Hospital, Burlington, VT
Robert Garofalo, MD, MPH
Associate Professor of Pediatrics and Preventive
Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of
Medicine; Medical Director, Adolescent HIV Services,
Director, Center for Gender, Sexuality and HIV Prevention,
Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hospital of Chicago, IL
Kenneth R. Ginsburg, MD, MS Ed, FAAP, FSAHM
Professor of Pediatrics, Perelman School of Medicine
at the University of Pennsylvania, Craig-Dalsimer
Division of Adolescent Medicine, The Children’s Hospital
of Philadelphia, Director of Health Services, Covenant
House of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA
Linda A. Hawkins, PhD, LPC
Adolescent Psychotherapist, Adolescent Initiative,
Craig-Dalsimer Division of Adolescent Medicine, The
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, PA
Cordella Hill, MSW
Executive Director, Covenant House Pennsylvania,
Philadelphia, PA
Renée R. Jenkins, MD, FAAP
Professor of Pediatrics, Director, Office of Faculty
Development, Howard University College of Medicine,
Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Howard
University Hospital, Washington, DC
Sara B. Kinsman, MD, PhD
Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Perelman
School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania,
Craig-Dalsimer Division of Adolescent Medicine, The
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, PA
Richard E. Kreipe, MD, FAAP, FSAHM, FAED
Dr. Elizabeth R. McAnarney Distinguished Professor of
Pediatrics, Division of Adolescent Medicine, Golisano
Children’s Hospital, University of Rochester; Medical
Director, Western New York Comprehensive Care Center
for Eating Disorders Rochester Director, New York State
ACT for Youth Center of Excellence, Rochester, NY
LTC Keith M. Lemmon, MD, FAAP
Chief, Division of Adolescent Medicine, Department of
Pediatrics, Madigan Army Medical Center, Joint Base
Lewis-McChord, WA; Assistant Professor of Pediatrics,
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences,
Bethesda, MD; Clinical Associate Professor of Pediatrics,
University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA
Amanda Lerman, MD
Fellow, Adolescent Medicine, Craig-Dalsimer Division
of Adolescent Medicine, The Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia, PA
Valerie J. Lewis, MD, MPH, FAAP, FSAHM
Adolescent Medicine Specialist, Department of
Pediatrics, Clinical Scientist, Division of Community
Health and Health Studies, Lehigh Valley Health Network,
Allentown, PA; Assistant Professor of Pediatrics,
University of South Florida Morsani College of Medicine,
Tampa, FL
Joseph Lively
Resilience Specialist, El Centro de Estudiantes,
Big Picture Philadelphia, PA
Laura Collins Lyster-Mensh, MS
Policy Director, F.E.A.S.T., Warrenton, VA
Zachary McClain, MD
Fellow, Adolescent Medicine, Craig-Dalsimer Division
of Adolescent Medicine, The Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia, PA
Hugh Organ, MS
Associate Executive Director, Covenant House
Pennsylvania; Chair, Philadelphia Anti-Trafficking
Coalition, Philadelphia, PA
Jarret R. Patton, MD, FAAP
Medical Staff President-Elect, Medical Director,
Outpatient Pediatrics, Lehigh Valley Health Network,
Allentown, PA; Assistant Professor of Pediatrics,
University of South Florida Morsani College of Medicine,
Tampa, FL
Rebecka Peebles, MD, FAAP
Assistant Professor, Perelman School of Medicine at the
University of Pennsylvania, Medical Director and Director
of Research and Quality, Eating Disorder Services, CraigDalsimer Division of Adolescent Medicine, The Children’s
Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA
Nadja G. Peter, MD
Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Perelman
School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania,
Craig-Dalsimer Division of Adolescent Medicine, The
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, PA
Jonathan R. Pletcher, MD, FAAP
Assistant Professor, Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh
School of Medicine; Clinical Director, Division of
Adolescent Medicine, Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of
UPMC, Pittsburgh, PA
Daniel H. Reirden, MD, FAAP, AAHIVMS
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Sections of Adolescent
Medicine and Infectious Disease, University of Colorado
School of Medicine; Medical Director of Youth HIV
Services, Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora, CO
Michael O. Rich, MD, MPH, FAAP, FSAHM
Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical
School; Associate Professor of Social and Behavioral
Sciences, Harvard School of Public Health; Director,
Center on Media and Child Health, Division of Adolescent
Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital, Boston, MA
Charles G. Rogers, MD
Fellow, Adolescent Medicine, Craig-Dalsimer Division
of Adolescent Medicine, The Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA
Nimi Singh, MD, MPH, MA
Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, Division
Head, Adolescent Health and Medicine, University of
Minnesota Amplatz Children’s Hospital, Minneapolis, MN
Gail B. Slap, MD, MSc, FSAHM
Professor of Pediatrics and Medicine, Perelman School
of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania; Associate
Chair for Education, Department of Pediatrics, The
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, PA
Jo Ann Sonis, LCSW, DCSW
Licensed Clinical Social Worker, Craig-Dalsimer Division
of Adolescent Medicine, Division of Gastroenterology,
Hepatology and Nutrition, The Children’s Hospital of
Philadelphia, PA
Victor C. Strasburger, MD, FAAP, FSAHM
Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics, Founding Chief,
Division of Adolescent Medicine, University of New
Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, NM
Susan T. Sugerman, MD, MPH, FAAP
Adolescent Medicine Physician; President and Cofounder,
Girls to Women Health and Wellness, Dallas, TX
Oana Tomescu, MD, PhD
Assistant Professor of Medicine and Pediatrics, Perelman
School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania,
Craig-Dalsimer Division of Adolescent Medicine, The
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia; Associate Program
Director, Internal Medicine and Pediatrics Residency
Program, Division of General Internal Medicine, Hospital
of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA
Maria Trent, MD, MPH, FAAP, FSAHM
Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Division of General
Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine; Training Director, JHU
Health Disparities Leadership in Education in Adolescent
Health Program & DC-Baltimore Research Center on Child
Health Disparities, Baltimore, MD
Lisa K. Tuchman, MD, MPH
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, Division of Adolescent
and Young Adult Medicine, Center for Translational
Science, Children’s Research Institute, Children’s National
Medical Center, The George Washington University
School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC
Stephen Van Bockern, EdD, MA
Professor of Education, Augustana College, Dean,
Reclaiming Youth International, Sioux Falls, SD
Dzung X. Vo, MD, FAAP
Assistant Clinical Professor, Division of Adolescent
Health and Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, British
Columbia Children’s Hospital, University of British
Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Zeelyna Wise
Director of Support Services, El Centro de Estudiantes,
Big Picture Philadelphia, PA
Michele Zucker, MD, MPH
Assistant Professor of Clinical Pediatrics, Perelman
School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania,
Craig-Dalsimer Division of Adolescent Medicine, The
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, PA
Additional Contributors
Several organizations arranged for their young people to
participate in this project
Covenant House Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA
El Centro de Estudiantes, Philadelphia, PA
Larkin Street Youth Services, San Francisco, CA
YouthBuild Philadelphia Charter School,
Philadelphia, PA
E sse nt i al pedi at r i c problem-so lve rs
AM:STARs
Adolescent Medicine: State of the Art Reviews
Adolescent Medicine: State of the Art Reviews is the official publication of the AAP
Section on Adolescent Health. Published 3 times per year, it offers adolescent medicine
specialists and other primary care physicians who treat adolescents timely information on all
matters relating to adolescent health and wellness. Each issue centers on a specific topic area
with expert advice.
Adolescent Medicine: State of the Art Reviews is a rolling subscription. Annual 3-edition
subscription begins with the next available issue.
SUB1006
Price: $124.95 Member Price: $114.95 Student Price: $63 Institutions: $174.95
Upcoming Publication Schedule
AM:STARs back issues
Young Adult Health
Price: $59.95 Member Price: $54.95
December 2013
Volume 24, Issue 3
Editors: David Rosen, MD, MPH
Alain Joffe, MD, MPH
Nutrition and Physical Activity
Editors: Mary Story, PhD, RD
Nicole Larson, PhD, MPH, RD
Substance Use and Abuse by Adolescents
MA0595 ISBN: 978-1-58110-603-9
eISBN: 978-1-58110-783-8
April 2014
Volume 25, Issue 1
Editors: Robert Brown, MD
Sheryl Ryan, MD
Subspecialty Update
Hot Topics in Adolescent Medicine
Current Psychopharmacology
for Psychiatric Disorders in
Adolescents
Editor: Donald E. Greydanus, MD
Handbook of Adolescent Medicine,
2nd Edition
Editors: Alain Joffe, MD, MPH
Margaret J. Blythe, MD
Devoted to issues that adolescent medicine
specialists are likely to encounter on any given
day, it includes material gathered from a variety
of sources, including textbooks, classic review
articles, insights of colleagues, and more.
Softcover, 2009
MA0479
ISBN: 978-1-58110-334-2
eISBN: 978-1-58110-405-9
Price: $59.95 $30
Member Price: $54.95 $27.50
MA0648 ISBN: 978-1-58110-749-4
eISBN: 978-1-58110-807-1
August 2014
Volume 25, Issue 2
Editors: Cynthia Holland-Hall, MD
Paula Braverman, MD
Available
as eBook
www.aapebooks.org
Editors: Robert L. Hendren, DO
Alya Reeve, MD, MPH
Special Offer:
Order by
December 31, 2013,
and SAVE 50%!
MA0649 ISBN: 978-1-58110-750-0
For a complete list of AM:STARs back issues in print and eBook, visit www.aap.org/bookstore.
NEW!!
NEW
Also available. . .
Guiding Adolescents to
Use Healthy Strategies to
Manage Stress
Editors: Kenneth R. Ginsburg, MD, MS Ed,
FAAP, FSAHM, and Sara B. Kinsman, MD, PhD
Developed for all youth-serving
professionals, this book with video
component reviews the basic principles of
strength-based communication, discusses
the sources of worry for teens, and offers
practical approaches for helping youth
understand they can control their reactions
and behaviors and strategies to help
professionals de-escalate tension
* More than 100 cloud-based video clips
when stressors lead to crises.
• Group learning and discussion topics
Available
as eBook
www.aapebooks.org
Softcover with access to cloud-based videos
ISBN: 978-1-58110-856-9
eISBN: 978-1-58110-857-6
MA0704
Price: $69.95 Member Price: $59.95
Building Resilience in
Children and Teens: Giving
Kids Roots and Wings,
2nd Edition
Kenneth R. Ginsburg, MD, MS Ed, FAAP, FSAHM,
With Martha M. Jablow
This award-winning book shows parents
how to help kids bounce back from life’s
challenges!
Available
as eBook
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Softcover, 2011——398 pages
ISBN: 978-1-58110-551-3
eISBN: 978-1-58110-619-0
CB0065
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from t h e A A P. . .
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Autism: Caring for Children with Autism
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A Resource Toolkit for Clinicians, 2nd Edition
This updated and extensively reviewed toolkit has been
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• Developmental screening and surveillance
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• Referral forms
CD-ROM, 2013 ISBN: 978-1-58110-586-5
CD0064 Price: $94.95 Member Price: $84.95
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ED0013 Price: $94.95 Member Price: $84.95
Family-Focused Pediatrics
Available
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Includes
English and
Spanish
Tools!
AAP Section on Developmental and Behavioral
Pediatrics
This best-selling resource gives one place to turn
for expert recommendations to deliver, coordinate,
and/or monitor quality developmental/behavioral
care within the medical home.
Available
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Bright Futures Guidelines,
3rd Edition Pocket Guide
Editor in Chief: Martin M. Fisher, MD, FAAP
Coeditors: Elizabeth M. Alderman, MD, FAAP;
Richard E. Kreipe, MD, FAAP;
Walter D. Rosenfeld, MD, FAAP
Available
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Hardcover, 2011——2,010 pages
ISBN: 978-1-58110-269-7
eISBN: 978-1-58110-565-0
MA0403 Price: $169.95
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The pocket guide summarizes each visit——developmental
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Softcover, 2008——65 pages
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ISBN: 978-1-58110-274-1
eISBN: 978-1-58110-550-6
MA0414 Price: $74.95 Member Price: $64.95
AAP Textbook of Adolescent Health Care
Bright Futures Guidelines for Health
Supervision of Infants, Children, and
Adolescents, 3rd Edition
Editors: Joseph F. Hagan, Jr. MD, FAAP; Judith S. Shaw, RN,
MPH, EdD; and Paula Duncan, MD, FAAP
The authoritative AAP Guidelines for Health Supervision III
you’ve relied on for years is combined with the practical
approach Bright Futures delivers. The result: an updated,
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care, save time, and keep up with changes in family,
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ISBN: 978-1-58110-315-1
eISBN: 978-1-58110-643-5
MA0459 Price: $49.95 Member Price: $44.95
AAP Developmental and Behavioral
Pediatrics
Caring for Children With ADHD
A Resource Toolkit for Clinicians, 2nd Edition
Bring the latest ADHD recommendations to your
practice with more than 40 tools——many in
English and Spanish. This toolkit includes
• Assessment and diagnosis, including NICHQ
Vanderbilt Assessment Scales
• Treatment and medication resources for the
clinician and parent
• Coding and payment guidance
Interviewing Techniques and Other Strategies
to Help Families Resolve Their Interactive and
Emotional Problems, 2nd Edition
William Lord Coleman, MD, FAAP
Now published by the AAP, the second edition
describes how to plan family meetings, interview
families using a family systems approach, assess
family interactions, and assist families to develop
adaptive behaviors.
Find full-text, online
versions of AAP titles
at www.aapebooks.org!
Available
as eBook
www.aapebooks.org
Bright Futures Tool and Resource Kit
The national standard for well-child care, the toolkit is
intended to make available to pediatric providers an
organized compilation of current forms and materials
that relate to preventive health supervision and health
screening for infants, children, and adolescents.
The purchase price cited includes a license for use of
up to 3 users for the purpose of providing health care
services. Full terms are included with the product.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
Your satisfaction
is guaranteed with
any purchase from the
American Academy
of Pediatrics.
License Reaching Teens
for your institution
or program! Contact
[email protected]
for more information.
CD-ROM, 2009
ISBN: 978-1-58110-225-3
BF0028 Price: $325
CL178 1013 415