Families: foundations for child and adolescent mental health and well-being

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dc.date.accessioned 2023-03-07T10:01:27Z
dc.date.available 2023-03-07T10:01:27Z
dc.date.issued 2023-03-07 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/19980
dc.description.abstract Families exist everywhere in the world to bear and rear children, to care for and protect vulnerable members during old age, illness, and misfortune, and to meet our relational needs. They are the bedrock of cultural traditions, norms and values, and behaviour patterns transmitted from one generation to the next. Our whole lives are spent in close interaction with family members and, as such, families play a critical role in our mental and physical well-being at all ages, but especially in the formative development period of childhood and adolescence. We begin here by describing the various forms that families can take, the central role families play in children's health and well-being, the ways in which dysfunction in the family can have long-lasting effects on mental health and well-being, and what is necessary to support families to best provide nurturing care. While families are universal, they are not uniform with respect to size, gender, age groups or even whether they are based on biological or social connections. Together, these characteristics define family form - the shape, composition and structure of a family unit. For the purposes of this chapter, we consider a family to be a single individual or group of individuals related to each other either socially or biologically, with at least one child in the family unit. Globally, families are becoming smaller with fewer children, generally leading to more investment in the health and education of each individual child, a long-standing trend beginning in the late 1800s described in Viviana's Zelizer's book, Pricing the Priceless Child: The Social Values of Children. en
dc.format.medium Print en
dc.publisher Children's Institute, University of Cape Town en
dc.subject FAMILIES en
dc.subject CHILDREN en
dc.subject ADOLESCENTS en
dc.subject MENTAL HEALTH en
dc.subject WELL-BEING en
dc.title Families: foundations for child and adolescent mental health and well-being en
dc.type Chapter in Monograph en
dc.description.version Y en
dc.ProjectNumber PTASAA en
dc.BudgetYear 2022/23 en
dc.ResearchGroup Human and Social Capabilities en
dc.SourceTitle South African child gauge 2021/2022: child and adolescent mental health en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Tomlinson, M. en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Kleintjes, S. en
dc.SourceTitle.Editor Lake, L. en
dc.PlaceOfPublication Cape Town en
dc.ArchiveNumber 9812693 en
dc.URL http://ktree.hsrc.ac.za/doc_read_all.php?docid=26551 en
dc.PageNumber 71-85 en
dc.outputnumber 14197 en
dc.bibliographictitle Naicker, S., Berry, L., Drysdale, R., Makusha, T. & Richter, L. (2022) Families: foundations for child and adolescent mental health and well-being. In: Tomlinson, M., Kleintjes, S. & Lake, L. (eds).South African child gauge 2021/2022: child and adolescent mental health. Cape Town : Children's Institute, University of Cape Town. 71-85. en
dc.publicationyear 2022 en
dc.contributor.author1 Naicker, S. en
dc.contributor.author2 Berry, L. en
dc.contributor.author3 Drysdale, R. en
dc.contributor.author4 Makusha, T. en
dc.contributor.author5 Richter, L. en


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