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Supervising Contact Visits: A Trauma-Informed Approach Based on Principles of Child-Parent Psychotherapy

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Abstract

Children who have been removed from their homes as a result of maltreatment and abuse and have been placed in foster care or are in the process of adoption often continue to meet their birth parents by court decision. This contact is often held under supervision. Supervised contact is intended to provide children the opportunity to maintain the parent-child relationship in a safe and neutral setting. Findings have shown that in some cases supervised contact can be harmful, undermining the children’s sense of security and placement stability. It has been suggested that agencies have limited practice skills to help build constructive relationships through contact visits, and may thereby be failing to offer sufficient support for supervised contact. While the literature highlights various aspects that need to be implemented to improve visits, there is a lack of a trauma-informed approach, whereby professionals supervising visits can address the traumatic experiences that led to the circumstances of supervised visitation and respond to the difficult emotions of all those involved. This paper provides practice guidelines for professionals accompanying supervised visits using principles of Child-Parent Psychotherapy, a trauma-informed dyadic intervention model for young children. Case vignettes illustrate how professionals supervising contact might address the child’s trauma history and help birth parents and foster/adoptive parents respond to the child’s attachment needs following trauma, and how professionals can support birth parents and foster/adoptive parents, thereby promoting safety and improving child-parent interactions. Recommendations are offered for attaining the best clinical practices in supervised contact, using seven practical guidelines.

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Hoffnung-Assouline, A., Knei-Paz, C. Supervising Contact Visits: A Trauma-Informed Approach Based on Principles of Child-Parent Psychotherapy. Clin Soc Work J 52, 136–149 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10615-023-00862-6

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