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Wikipedia

Play therapy

Play therapy refers to a range of methods of capitalising on children's natural urge to explore and harnessing it to meet and respond to the developmental and later also their mental health needs. It is also used for forensic or psychological assessment purposes where the individual is too young or too traumatised to give a verbal account of adverse, abusive or potentially criminal circumstances in their life.

Play therapy
Children playing during a session with a psychologist
ICD-9-CM93.81, 94.36
MeSHD010989
[edit on Wikidata]

Play therapy is extensively acknowledged by specialists as an effective intervention in complementing children's personal and inter-personal development. Play and play therapy are generally employed with children aged six months through late adolescence and young adulthood. They provide a contained way for them to express their experiences and feelings through an imaginative self-expressive process in the context of a trusted relationship with the care giver or therapist.[1] As children's and young people's experiences and knowledge are typically communicated through play, it is an essential vehicle for personality and social development.

In recent years, play therapists in the western hemisphere, as a body of health professionals, are usually members or affiliates of professional training institutions and tend to be subject to codes of ethical practice.[2]

Play as therapy edit

Jean Piaget emphasized play as an essential expression of children's feelings, especially because they do not know how to communicate their feelings with words.[3] Play helps a child develop a sense of true self and a mastery over their innate abilities resulting in a sense of worth and aptitude.[4] During play, children are driven to meet the essential need of exploring and affecting their environment. Play also contributes in the advancement of creative thinking. Play likewise provides a way for children to release strong emotions. During play, children may play out challenging life experiences by re-engineering them, thereby discharging emotional states, with the potential of integrating every experience back into stability and gaining a greater sense of mastery.[5]

General edit

Play therapy is a form of psychotherapy which uses play as the main mode of communication especially with children, and people whose speech capacity may be compromised, to determine and overcome psychosocial challenges. It is aimed at helping patients towards better growth and development, social integration, decreased aggression,[6] emotional modulation, social skill development,[7] empathy,[8] and trauma resolution. Play therapy also assists with sensorimotor development and coping skills.[9][10]

Play therapy is an effective technique for therapy, regardless of age, gender, or nature of the problem.[11] When children do not know how to communicate their problems, they act out. This may look like misbehavior in school, with friends or at home. Play therapy seeks to provide a way children can cope with difficult emotions and helps them find healthier solutions and coping mechanisms.[12]

Diagnostic tool edit

Play therapy can also be used as a tool for diagnosis. A play therapist observes a client playing with toys (play-houses, soft toys, dolls, etc.) to determine the cause of the disturbed behaviour.[13] The objects and patterns of play, as well as the willingness to interact with the therapist, can be used to understand the underlying rationale for behaviour both inside and outside of therapy session. Caution, however, should be taken when using play therapy for assessment and/or diagnostic purposes.[14][15]

According to the psychodynamic view, people (especially children) will engage in play behaviour to work through their interior anxieties. According to this viewpoint, play therapy can be used as a self-regulating mechanism, as long as children are allowed time for free play or unstructured play. However, some forms of therapy depart from non-directiveness in fantasy play, and introduce varying amounts of direction, during the therapy session.

An example of a more directive approach to play therapy, for example, can entail the use of a type of desensitisation or relearning therapy, to change troubling behaviours, either systematically or through a less structured approach. The hope is that through the language of symbolic play, such desensitisation may take place, as a natural part of the therapeutic experience, and lead to positive treatment outcomes.

Origins edit

 
Little horse on wheels, Ancient Greek children's toy. From a tomb dating 950–900 BCE, Kerameikos Archaeological Museum, Athens

Children's play has been recorded in artefacts at least since antiquity. In eighteenth-century Europe, Rousseau (1712–1778) wrote, in his book Emile, about the importance of observing play as a way to learn about and understand children.[16]

From Education to Therapeutics edit

During the 19th century, European educationalists began to address play as an integral part of childhood education. They include Friedrich Fröbel,[17] Rudolf Steiner,[18] Maria Montessori,[19] L. S. Vygotsky,[20] Margaret Lowenfeld,[21] and Hans Zulliger.[22]

Hermine Hug-Hellmuth formalised play as therapy by providing children with toys to express themselves and observed play to analyse the child.[23] In 1919, Melanie Klein began to use play as a means of analyzing children under the age of six.[24] She believed that child's play was essentially the same as free association used with adults, and that as such, it was provide access to the child's unconscious.[25] Anna Freud (1946, 1965) used play as a means to facilitate an attachment to the therapist and supposedly gain access to the child's psyche.[26]

Arguably, the first documented case, describing a proto-therapeutic use of play, was in 1909 when Sigmund Freud published his work with "Little Hans", a five-year-old child suffering from a horse phobia. Freud saw him once briefly and recommended his father take note of Hans' play to provide observations which might assist the child. The case of "Little Hans" was the first case where a child's difficulty was adduced to emotional factors.[27][28]

Models edit

 
An individual engaging in sandplay therapy.
 
Equipment used for sandplay therapy.
 
H. G. Wells' Floor Games (1911) inspired Margaret Lowenfeld's play therapy

Play therapy can be divided into two basic types: non-directive and directive. Non-directive play therapy is a non-intrusive method in which children are encouraged to play in the expectation that this will alleviate their problems as perceived by their care-givers and other adults. It is often classified as a psychodynamic therapy. In contrast, directed play therapy is a method that includes more structure and guidance by the therapist as children work through emotional and behavioural difficulties through play. It often contains a behavioural component and the process includes more prompting by the therapist.[29] Both types of play therapy have received at least some empirical support.[30] On average, play therapy treatment groups, when compared to control groups, improve by .8 standard deviations.[30][31]

Jessie Taft (1933), (Otto Rank's American translator),[32] and Frederick H. Allen (1934) developed an approach they entitled relationship therapy.[33] The primary emphasis is placed on the emotional relationship between the therapist and the child. The focus is placed on the child's freedom and strength to choose.

Virginia Axline, a child therapist from the 1950s applied Carl Rogers' work to children. Rogers had explored the work of the therapist relationship and developed non-directive therapy, later called Client-Centred Therapy.[34] Axline summarized her concept of play therapy in her article, 'Entering the child's world via play experiences'. She described play as a therapeutic experience that allows the child to express themselves in their own way and time. That type of freedom allows adults and children to develop a secure relationship.(Progressive Education, 27, p. 68). Axline also wrote Dibs in Search of Self, which describes a series of play therapy sessions over a period of a year.[35]

Nondirective play therapy edit

Non-directive play therapy, may encompass child psychotherapy and unstructured play therapy. It is guided by the notion that if given the chance to speak and play freely in appropriate therapeutic conditions, troubled children and young people will be helped towards resolving their difficulties. Non-directive play therapy is generally regarded as mainly non-intrusive.[36] The hallmark of non-directive play therapy is that it has minimal constraints apart from the frame and thus can be used at any age.[37] These approaches to therapy may originate from Margaret Lowenfeld, Anna Freud, Donald Winnicott, Michael Fordham, Dora Kalff, all of them child specialists or even from the adult therapist, Carl Rogers' non-directive psychotherapy and in his characterisation of "the optimal therapeutic conditions". Virginia Axline adapted Carl Rogers's theories to child therapy in 1946 and is widely considered the founder of this therapy.[38] Different techniques have since been established that fall under the realm of non-directive play therapy, including traditional sandplay therapy, play therapy using provided toys and Winnicott's Squiggle and Spatula games. Each of these forms is covered briefly below.

Using toys in non-directive play therapy with children is a method used by child psychotherapists and play therapists. These approaches are derived from the way toys were used in Anna Freud's theoretical orientation.[39] The idea behind this method is that children will be better able to express their feelings toward themselves and their environment through play with toys than through verbalisation of their feelings. Through this experience children may be able to achieve catharsis, gain more stability and enjoyment in their emotions, and test their own reality.[40] Popular toys used during therapy are animals, dolls, hand puppets, soft toys, crayons, and cars. Therapists have deemed such objects as more likely to open imaginative play or creative associations, both of which are important in expression.[39]

Sandplay edit

 
An adult example

Jungian analytical method of psychotherapy using a tray of sand and miniature, symbolic figures is attributed to Dr. Margaret Lowenfeld, a paediatrician interested in child psychology who pioneered her "World Technique" in 1929, drawn from the writer H. G. Wells and his Floor Games published in 1911.[41] Dora Kalff, who studied with her, combined Lowenfeld's World Technique with Carl Jung's idea of the collective unconscious and received Lowenfeld's permission to name her version of the work "sandplay".[42] As in traditional non-directive play therapy, research has shown that allowing an individual to freely play with the sand and accompanying objects in the contained space of the sandtray (22.5" x 28.5") can facilitate a healing process as the unconscious expresses itself in the sand and influences the sand player. When a client creates "scenes" in the sandtray, little instruction is provided and the therapist offers little or no talk during the process. This protocol emphasises the importance of holding what Kalff referred to as the "free and protected space" to allow the unconscious to express itself in symbolic, non-verbal play. Upon completion of a tray, the client may or may not choose to talk about his or her creation, and the therapist, without the use of directives and without touching the sandtray, may offer supportive response that does not include interpretation. The rationale is that the therapist trusts and respects the process by allowing the images in the tray to exert their influence without interference.[43] Sandplay Therapy can be used during individual sessions. The limitations presented by the boundaries of the sandtray can serve as physical and symbolic limitations to unconscious, symbolic matherial that can be further reflected in analytical dialogue. The ISST, International Society for Sandplay Therapy, defines guidelines for training in Sandplay Therapy as well as guidelines for becoming a teaching therapist.

Winnicott's Squiggle and Spatula games edit

Donald Winnicott probably first came upon the central notion of play from his collaboration in wartime with the psychiatric social worker, Clare Britton, (later a psychoanalyst and his second wife), who in 1945 published an article on the importance of play for children.[44] By "playing", he meant not only the ways that children of all ages play, but also the way adults "play" through making art, or engaging in sports, hobbies, humour, meaningful conversation, etc. Winnicott believed that it was only in playing that people are entirely their true selves, so it followed that for psychoanalysis to be effective, it needed to serve as a mode of playing.

Two of the playing techniques Winnicott used in his work with children were the squiggle game and the spatula game. The first involved Winnicott drawing a shape for the child to play with and extend (or vice versa) – a practice extended by his followers into that of using partial interpretations as a 'squiggle' for a patient to make use of.[45]

The second involved Winnicott placing a spatula (medical tongue depressor) within the child's reach for her/him to play with.[46] Winnicott considered that babies will be automatically attracted to an object, reach for it, and then discover what they intend to do with it after a while.[47] p. 75–6. From the child's initial hesitation in making use of the spatula, Winnicott derived his idea of the necessary 'period of hesitation' in childhood (or analysis), which makes possible a true connection to the toy, interpretation or object presented for transference.[45] p. 12.

Efficacy edit

 
Winnie-The-Pooh, the original "Winnie", possibly Christopher Robin's transitional object

Winnicott came to consider that "Playing takes place in the potential space between the baby and the mother-figure....[T]he initiation of playing is associated with the life experience of the baby who has come to trust the mother figure".[47] "Potential space" was Winnicott's term for a sense of an inviting and safe interpersonal field in which one can be spontaneously playful while at the same time connected to others.[45] p. 162. Playing can also be seen in the use of a transitional object, a term Winnicott coined for an object, such as a teddy bear, which may have a quality for a small child of being both real and made-up at the same time. Winnicott pointed out that no one demands that a toddler explain whether his Binky is a "real bear" or a creation of the child's own imagination, and went on to argue that it was very important that the child be allowed to experience the Binky as being in an undefined, "transitional" status between the child's imagination and the real world outside the child.[47] p. 169. For Winnicott, one of the most important and precarious stages of development was in the first three years of life, when an infant grows into a child with an increasingly separate sense of self in relation to a larger world of other people. In health, the child learns to bring his or her spontaneous, real self into play with others; whereas in a False self disorder, the child may find it unsafe or impossible to do so, and instead may feel compelled to hide the true self from other people, and pretend to be whatever they want instead.[48] Playing with a transitional object can be an important early bridge "between self and other", which helps a child develop the capacity to be creative and genuine in relationships.[47] p. 170-2.

Research edit

Play therapy has been considered to be an established and popular mode of therapy for children for over sixty years.[49] Critics of play therapy have questioned the effectiveness of the technique for use with children and have suggested using other interventions with greater empirical support such as Cognitive behavioral therapy.[29] They also argue that therapists focus more on the institution of play rather than the empirical literature when conducting therapy.[50] Classically, Lebo argued against the efficacy of play therapy in 1953, and Phillips reiterated his argument again in 1985. Both claimed that play therapy lacks in several areas of hard research. Many studies included small sample sizes, which limits the generalisability, and many studies also only compared the effects of play therapy to a control group. Without a comparison to other therapies, it is difficult to determine if play therapy really is the most effective treatment.[51][52] Recent play therapy researchers have worked to conduct more experimental studies with larger sample sizes, specific definitions and measures of treatment, and more direct comparisons.[50]

Outside of the psychoanalytic child psychotherapy field, which is well annotated,[53][54] research is comparatively lacking in other, or random applications, on the overall effectiveness of using toys in non-directive play therapy. Dell Lebo found that out of a sample of over 4,000 children, those who played with recommended toys vs. non-recommended or no toys during non-directive play therapy were no more likely to verbally express themselves to the therapist. Examples of recommended toys would be dolls or crayons, while example of non-recommended toys would be marbles or a checkers board game.[39] There is also ongoing controversy in choosing toys for use in non-directive play therapy, with choices being largely made through intuition rather than through research.[40] However, other research shows that following specific criteria when choosing toys in non-directive play therapy can make treatment more efficacious. Criteria for a desirable treatment toy include a toy that facilitates contact with the child, encourages catharsis, and lead to play that can be easily interpreted by a therapist.[40]

Several meta analyses have shown promising results about the efficacy of non-directive play therapy. Meta analysis by authors LeBlanc and Ritchie, 2001, found an effect size of 0.66 for non-directive play therapy.[36] This finding is comparable to the effect size of 0.71 found for psychotherapy used with children,[55] indicating that both non-directive play and non-play therapies are almost equally effective in treating children with emotional difficulties. Meta analysis by authors Ray, Bratton, Rhine and Jones, 2001, found an even larger effect size for nondirective play therapy, with children performing at 0.93 standard deviations better than non-treatment groups.[29] These results are stronger than previous meta-analytic results, which reported effect sizes of 0.71,[55] 0.71,[56] and 0.66.[36] Meta analysis by authors Bratton, Ray, Rhine, and Jones, 2005, also found a large effect size of 0.92 for children being treated with non-directive play therapy.[30] Results from all meta-analyses indicate that non-directive play therapy has been shown to be just as effective as psychotherapy used with children and even generates higher effect sizes in some studies.[29][30]

Predictors of effectiveness edit

There are several predictors that may also influence how effectiveness play therapy is with children. The number of sessions is a significant predictor in post-test outcomes, with more sessions being indicative of higher effect sizes.[29] Positive effects can be seen with 16 sessions,[38] however, there is a peak effect when a child can complete 35–40 sessions.[36] An exception is children that undergo play therapy in critical-incident settings, such as hospitals and domestic violence shelters. Results from studies that looked at these children indicated a large positive effect size after only 7 sessions, which shows that children in crisis may respond more readily to treatment.[30] Parental involvement is also a significant predictor of positive play therapy results. This involvement generally entails participation in each session with the therapist and the child.[57] Parental involvement in play therapy sessions has also been shown to diminish stress in the parent-child relationship when kids are exhibiting both internal and external behaviour problems.[58] Despite these predictors which have been shown to increase effect sizes, play therapy has been shown to be equally effective across age, gender, and individual vs. group settings.[29][30]

Play Therapist Training

Frequently counselors in the play therapy field address a number of obstacles when it comes to helping children. The vast majority of counselors starting off lack the basic knowledge needed to be an effective play therapist. Training for these counselors is done through many different techniques such as university counselor education programs, workshops in hopes to meet the various needs of the children. Different studies are also performed to further assess the progress of the counselor's skill set based on which type of training they pursued. Studies have shown that those that studied play therapy through the university level have displayed higher levels of skills, attitudes and knowledge. The children that need play therapy deal with many different disorders and behaviors and it is imperative that the therapist have these main skills in order for play therapy to be effective. Understanding the stages of child development and how play can help assist them with it is an important step to their learning process.[59]

Play therapist requirements may differ from state to state, but generally, play therapists need a Master's degree or higher degree in a mental health related subject. They must also have demonstrated skills in the field of Child Development.[60] After obtaining a degree, additional classes and work is needed to obtain a certification as a Registered Play Therapist (RPT). Additional work includes: 150 documented hours of instruction, specific to play therapy, a minimum of 350 direct client contact hours (under Supervision of someone who is a Registered Play Therapist Supervisor RPT-S), and 35 hours of direct supervision with 5 session observations.[61]

Directive play therapy edit

 
Friedrich Fröbel's wooden Construction kit, 1782–1852 SINA Facsimile
 
Plastic Lego Bricks

In the 1930s David Levy developed a technique he called release therapy.[62] His technique emphasized a structured approach. A child, who had experienced a specific stressful situation, would be allowed to engage in free play. Subsequently, the therapist would introduce play materials related to the stress-evoking situation allowing the child to reenact the traumatic event and release the associated emotions.

In 1955, Gove Hambidge expanded on Levy's work emphasizing a "structured play therapy" model, which was more direct in introducing situations. The format of the approach was to establish rapport, recreate the stress-evoking situation, play out the situation and then free play to recover.

Directive play therapy is guided by the notion that using directives to guide the child through play will cause a faster change than is generated by nondirective play therapy. The therapist plays a much bigger role in directive play therapy. Therapists may use several techniques to engage the child, such as engaging in play with the child themselves or suggesting new topics instead of letting the child direct the conversation himself.[63] Stories read by directive therapists are more likely to have an underlying purpose, and therapists are more likely to create interpretations of stories that children tell. In directive therapy games are generally chosen for the child, and children are given themes and character profiles when engaging in doll or puppet activities.[64] This therapy still leaves room for free expression by the child, but it is more structured than nondirective play therapy. There are also different established techniques that are used in directive play therapy, including directed sandtray therapy and cognitive behavioral play therapy.[63]

Directed sandtray therapy is more commonly used with trauma victims and involves the "talk" therapy to a much greater extent. Because trauma is often debilitating, directed sandplay therapy works to create change in the present, without the lengthy healing process often required in traditional sandplay therapy.[65] This is why the role of the therapist is important in this approach. Therapists may ask clients questions about their sandtray, suggest them to change the sandtray, ask them to elaborate on why they chose particular objects to put in the tray, and on rare occasions, change the sandtray themselves. Use of directives by the therapist is very common. While traditional sandplay therapy is thought to work best in helping clients access troubling memories, directed sandtray therapy is used to help people manage their memories and the impact it has had on their lives.[65]

Filial therapy, developed by Bernard and Louise Guerney, was an innovation in play therapy during the 1960s.[66] The filial approach emphasizes a structured training program for parents in which they learn how to employ child-centered play sessions in the home. In the 1960s, with the advent of school counselors, school-based play therapy began a major shift from the private sector. Counselor-educators such as Alexander (1964); Landreth;[67][68] Muro (1968); Myrick and Holdin (1971); Nelson (1966); and Waterland (1970) began to contribute significantly, especially in terms of using play therapy as both an educational and preventive tool in dealing with children's issues.

Roger Phillips, in the early 1980s, was one of the first to suggest that combining aspects of cognitive behavioral therapy with play interventions would be a good theory to investigate.[51] Cognitive behavioral play therapy was then developed to be used with very young children between two and six years of age. It incorporates aspects of Aaron Beck's cognitive therapy with play therapy because children may not have the developed cognitive abilities necessary for participation in straight cognitive therapy.[69] In this therapy, specific toys such as dolls and stuffed animals may be used to model particular cognitive strategies, such as effective coping mechanisms and problem-solving skills. Little emphasis is placed on the children's verbalizations in these interactions but rather on their actions and their play.[64] Creating stories with the dolls and stuffed animals is a common method used by cognitive behavioral play therapists to change children's maladaptive thinking.

Efficacy edit

The efficacy of directive play therapy has been less established than that of nondirective play therapy, yet the numbers still indicate that this mode of play therapy is also effective.[70] In 2001 meta analysis by authors Ray, Bratton, Rhine, and Jones, direct play therapy was found to have an effect size of .73 compared to the .93 effect size that nondirective play therapy was found to have.[29] Similarly in 2005 meta analysis by authors Bratton, Ray, Rhine, and Jones, directive therapy had an effect size of 0.71, while nondirective play therapy had an effect size of 0.92.[30] Although the effect sizes of directive therapy are statistically significantly lower than those of nondirective play therapy, they are still comparable to the effect sizes for psychotherapy used with children, demonstrated by Casey,[55] Weisz,[56] and LeBlanc.[36] A potential reason for the difference in the effect size may be due to the number of studies that have been done on nondirective vs. directive play therapy. Approximately 73 studies in each meta analysis examined nondirective play therapy, while there were only 12 studies that looked at directive play therapy. Once more research is done on directive play therapy, there is potential that effect sizes between nondirective and directive play therapy will be more comparable.[29][30]

Application of electronic games edit

 
An early video game played by two children

The prevalence and popularity of video games in recent years has created a wealth of psychological studies centred around them. While the bulk of those studies have covered video game violence and addiction, some mental health practitioners in the West, are becoming interested in including such games as therapeutic tools. These are by definition "directive" tools since they are internally governed by algorithms. Since the introduction of electronic media into popular Western culture, the nature of games has become more diverse, complex, realistic and social.[71] The commonalities between electronic and traditional play (such as providing a safe space to work through strong emotions) infer similar benefits. Video games have been broken into two categories: "serious" games, or games developed specifically for health or learning reasons, and "off-the-shelf" games, or games without a clinical focus that may be re-purposed for a clinical setting.[72] Use of electronic games by clinicians is a new practice, and unknown risks as well as benefits may arise as the practice becomes more mainstream.[73]

Research edit

Most of the current research relating to electronic games in therapeutic settings is focused on alleviating the symptoms of depression, primarily in adolescents. However, some games have been developed specifically for children with anxiety and Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD),[74][75] The same company behind the latter intends to create electronic treatments for children on the autism spectrum, and those living with Major depressive disorder, among other disorders.[76] The favoured approach for mental health treatment is through Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT).[77] While this method is effective, it is not without its limitations: for example, boredom with the material, patients forgetting or not practicing techniques outside of a session, or the accessibility of care.[78] It is these areas that therapists hope to address through the use of electronic games. Preliminary research has been done with small groups, and the conclusions drawn warrant studying the issue in greater depth.[79]

Role-playing games (RPGs) are the most common type of electronic game used as part of therapeutic interventions. These are games where players assume roles, and outcomes depend on the actions taken by the player in a virtual world.[80] Psychologists are able to gain insights into the elements of the capability of the patient to create or experiment with an alternate identity. There are also those who underscore the ease in the treatment process since playing an RPG as a treatment situation is often experienced as an invitation to play, which makes the process safe and without risk of exposure or embarrassment.[81] The most well-known and well-documented RPG-style game used in treatment is SPARX. Taking place in a fantasy world, SPARX users play through seven levels, each lasting about half an hour, and each level teaching a technique to overcome depressive thoughts and behaviours. Reviews of the study have found the game treatment comparable to CBT-only therapy.[78][82] However one review noted that SPARX alone is not more effective than standard CBT treatment.[83] There are also studies that found role-playing games, when combined with the Adlerian Play Therapy (AdPT) techniques, lead to increased psychosocial development.[84] ReachOutCentral is geared toward youth and teens, providing gamified information on the intersection of thoughts, feelings, and behavior. An edition developed specifically to aid clinicians, ReachOutPro, offers more tools to increase patients' engagement.[85]

Other applications edit

 
Typical Tetris Game

Biofeedback (sometimes known as applied psychophysiological feedback) media is more suited to treating a range of anxiety disorders. Biofeedback tools are able to measure heart rate, skin moisture, blood flow, and brain activity to ascertain stress levels,[86] with a goal of teaching stress management and relaxation techniques. The development of electronic games using this equipment is still in its infancy, and thus few games are on the market. The Journey to Wild Divine's developers have asserted that their products are a tool, not a game, though the three instalments contain many game elements. Conversely, Freeze Framer's design is reminiscent of an Atari system. Three simplistic games are included in Freeze Framer's 2.0 model, using psychophysiological feedback as a controller.[87] The effectiveness of both pieces of software saw significant changes in participants' depression levels.[82] A biofeedback game initially designed to assist with anxiety symptoms, Relax to Win, was similarly found to have broader treatment applications.[88] Extended Attention Span Training (EAST), developed by NASA to gauge the attention of pilots, was remodeled as an ADHD aid. Brain waves of participants were monitored during play of commercial video games available on PlayStation, and the difficulty of the games increased as participants' attention waned. The efficacy of this treatment is comparable to traditional ADHD intervention.[89]

Several online-only or mobile games (Re-Mission, Personal Investigator,[90] Treasure Hunt,[91] and Play Attention)[92] have been specifically noted for use in alleviating disorders other than those for anxiety and mood.[93] Re-Mission 2 especially targets children, the game having been designed with the knowledge that today's western youth are immersed in digital media.[94] Mobile applications for anxiety, depression, relaxation, and other areas of mental health are readily available in the Android Play Store and the Apple App Store.[95] The proliferation of laptops, mobile phones, and tablets means one can access these apps at any time, in any place. Many of them are low-cost or even free, and the games do not need to be complex to be of benefit. Playing a three-minute game of Tetris has the potential to curb a number of cravings,[96] a longer play time could reduce flashback symptoms from posttraumatic stress disorder,[97] and an initial study found that a visual-spatial game such as Tetris or Candy Crush, when played closely following a traumatic event, could be used as a "'therapeutic vaccine" to prevent future flashbacks.[98]

Efficacy edit

While the field of allowing electronic media a place in a therapist's office is new, the equipment is not necessarily so. Most western children are familiar with modern PCs, consoles, and handheld devices even if the practitioner is not. An even more recent addition to interacting with a game environment is virtual reality equipment, which both adolescent and clinician might need to learn to use properly. The umbrella term for the preliminary studies done with VR is Virtual reality exposure therapy (VRET). This research is based on traditional exposure therapy and has been found to be more effective for participants than for those placed in a wait list control group,[93] though not as effective as in-person treatments. One study tracked two groups – one group receiving a typical, lengthier treatment while the other was treated via shorter VRET sessions – and found that the effectiveness for VRET patients was significantly less at the six-month mark.[88]

In the future, clinicians may look forward to using electronic media as a way to assess patients,[89] as a motivational tool,[99] and facilitate social in-person and virtual interactions.[100] Current data, though limited, points toward combining traditional therapy methods with electronic media for the most effective treatment.[73][79][101][102]

Play therapy in literature edit

In 1953 Clark Moustakas wrote his first book, Children in Play Therapy. In 1956 he compiled Publication of The Self, the result of the dialogues between Moustakas, Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers, and others, forging the humanistic psychology movement. In 1973 Moustakas continued his journey into play therapy and published his novel The child's discovery of himself. Moustakas' work as being concerned with the kind of relationship needed to make therapy a growth experience. His stages start with the child's feelings being generally negative and as they are expressed, they become less intense, the end results tend to be the emergence of more positive feelings and more balanced relationships.[103]

Now, there are several published books outlining play therapy and specific techniques within play therapy. The Association for Play Therapy has a comprehensive list of play therapy books on their website. These books include 101 Play Therapy Techniques by Jason Aronson, A Handbook of Play Therapy with Aggressive Children by David E. Crenshaw, ADAPT: A Developmental Attachment-based, Play Therapy, by Jennifer Lefebre, and many others that outline Play Therapy and its use in specific circumstances.[104]

Parent/Child Play Therapy edit

 
Playfulness by Paul Manship, 1912–1914

Play therapy is an evidence based approach for children that allows them to find ways to learn, process their emotions, and make meaning of the world around them. Play therapy can be used for several reasons including trauma, autism, behavior, attachment, and language.

Training in nondirective play for parents has been shown to significantly reduce mental health problems in at-risk preschool children.[105] One of the first parent/child play therapy approaches developed was Filial Therapy (in the 1960s - see History section above), in which parents are trained to facilitate nondirective play therapy sessions with their own children. Filial therapy has been shown to help children work through trauma and also resolve behavior problems.[106]

Allowing children who struggle with trauma to use play therapy allows for them to work through their trauma and begin to trust beyond it. Adults that respond differently to the child's closed off and defensive behaviors will help children start to develop trust beyond their trauma. (Parker, Hergenrather, Smelser, & Kelly, 2021).[107] When parents respond to children defensively, the child doesn't trust them due to their past trauma. Working with a child-centered play therapist allows for the therapist to engage with the child, convey messages, and is open with the child may express regarding their previous or current trauma, The therapist responds in an empathetic and understanding way to allow the child to become openminded and respond in an enjoyable way rather than a self-protective, defensive way.

Another approach to play therapy that involves parents is Theraplay, which was developed in the 1970s. At first, trained therapists worked with children, but Theraplay later evolved into an approach in which parents are trained to play with their children in specific ways at home. Theraplay is based on the idea that parents can improve their children's behavior and help them overcome emotional problems by engaging their children in forms of play that replicate the playful, attuned, and empathic interactions of a parent with an infant. Studies have shown that Theraplay is effective in changing children's behavior, especially for children suffering from attachment disorders.[108]

In the 1980s, Stanley Greenspan developed Floortime, a comprehensive, play-based approach for parents and therapists to use with autistic children.[109] There is evidence for the success of this program with children diagnosed with autistic spectrum disorders.[110][111]

Lawrence J. Cohen has created an approach called Playful Parenting, in which he encourages parents to play with their children to help resolve emotional and behavioral issues. Parents are encouraged to connect playfully with their children through silliness, laughter, and roughhousing.[112]

In 2006, Garry Landreth and Sue Bratton developed a highly researched and structured way of teaching parents to engage in therapeutic play with their children. It is based on a supervised entry level training in child centred play therapy. They named it Child Parent Relationship Therapy.[113] These 10 sessions focus on parenting issues in a group environment and utilises video and audio recordings to help the parents receive feedback on their 30-minute 'special play times' with their children.

More recently, Aletha Solter has developed a comprehensive approach for parents called Attachment Play, which describes evidence-based forms of play therapy, including non-directive play, more directive symbolic play, contingency play, and several laughter-producing activities. Parents are encouraged to use these playful activities to strengthen their connection with their children, resolve discipline issues, and also help the children work through traumatic experiences such as hospitalization or parental divorce.[114][115][116]

The emotional bond formed between a caregiver and their child is called attachment. (Lin, 2003).[117] A child having attachment issues is significant because a child can have either a good or bad attachment to their primary caregiver. Which can lead to development and behavioral issues as the age depending on the type of attachment. When using play therapy for attachment issues it is essential to ease into it because the child could have emotional isolating and the therapy benefits both the parent and child due to being connected on a deeper level. It allows the parent and the child to build their relationship and the child to feel more secure with the parent.

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Axline, V. (1947). Nondirective therapy for poor readers" Journal of Consulting Psychology 11, 61–69.
  • Axline, V. (1969, revised ed.). Play Therapy. New York: Ballantine Books.
  • Barrett, C. Hampe, T.E. & Miller, L. (1978). Research on child psychotherapy. In Garfield, S. & Bergin, A. (Eds.). Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change. New York: Wiley.
  • Freud, A. (1946). The psycho-analytic treatment of children. London: Imago.
  • Freud, A. (1965). The psycho-analytical treatment of children. New York: International Universities Press.
  • Freud, S. (1909). The case of "Little Hans" and the "Rat Man." London: Hogarth Press.
  • Froebel (1903). The education of man. New York: D. Appleton.
  • Guerney, B., Guerney, L., & Andronico, M. (1976). The therapeutic use of children's play. New York: Jason Aronson.
  • Grant, Robert, Jason. (Ed.) with Stone, Jessica and Mellenthin, Clair. (2020). Play Therapy Theories and Perspectives: A Collection of Thoughts in the Field. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780367418373
  • Hug-Hellmuth, H (1921). "On the technique of child-analysis". International Journal of Psycho-Analysis. 2: 287–305.
  • Klein, M. The Collected Writings of Melanie Klein in four volumes, London: Hogarth Press.
  • Landreth, G. L. (2002). Play therapy: The art of the relationship. (2nd ed.). New York: (Second Edition 2002). ISBN 1-58391-327-0. Brunner-Routledge.
  • Lanyado, Monica and Horne, Ann. (Eds.) (1999). The Handbook of Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy: Psychoanalytic Approaches. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780203135341. DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203135341
  • Lowenfeld, M. (1939). "The world pictures of children: A method of recording and studying them". British Journal of Medical Psychology. 18: 65–101. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8341.1939.tb00710.x.
  • O'Connor, Kevin J; Schaefer, Charles E; Braverman, Lisa D, eds. (2015). Handbook of Play Therapy, 2nd Edition. Wiley. ISBN 978-1-118-85983-4.
  • Phillips, R.; Landreth, G. (1998). "Play therapists on play therapy (Part 2) Clinical issues in play therapy". International Journal of Play Therapy. 6 (2): 1–24. doi:10.1037/h0089416.
  • Schaefer, C. (1993). The therapeutic powers of play. New Jersey: Jason Aronson.
  • Schaefer, Charles, E. Kaduson, Heidi. (2006). Contemporary Play Therapy: Theory, Research, and Practice. United Kingdom: Guilford Publications.
  • Winnicott, D. W. (1971) The Piggle: An Account of the Psychoanalytic Treatment of a Little Girl. London: Hogarth Press, ISBN 0-140-1466-79

External links edit

  • Association of Child Psychotherapists (ACP) the professional body for Psychoanalytic Child and Adolescent Psychotherapists in the UK
  • Arquetipo Ludi (Spanish)
  • Canadian Association of Play Therapy
  • Association of Play Therapy
  • British Association of Play Therapists
  • Play Therapy International
  • Play Therapy United Kingdom
  • The Play Therapy Institute
  • Play Therapy Australia
  • British Association of Clinical Play Therapists
  • Sandtray Therapy
  • The Squiggle Foundation, London 1 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine

play, therapy, refers, range, methods, capitalising, children, natural, urge, explore, harnessing, meet, respond, developmental, later, also, their, mental, health, needs, also, used, forensic, psychological, assessment, purposes, where, individual, young, tra. Play therapy refers to a range of methods of capitalising on children s natural urge to explore and harnessing it to meet and respond to the developmental and later also their mental health needs It is also used for forensic or psychological assessment purposes where the individual is too young or too traumatised to give a verbal account of adverse abusive or potentially criminal circumstances in their life Play therapyChildren playing during a session with a psychologistICD 9 CM93 81 94 36MeSHD010989 edit on Wikidata Play therapy is extensively acknowledged by specialists as an effective intervention in complementing children s personal and inter personal development Play and play therapy are generally employed with children aged six months through late adolescence and young adulthood They provide a contained way for them to express their experiences and feelings through an imaginative self expressive process in the context of a trusted relationship with the care giver or therapist 1 As children s and young people s experiences and knowledge are typically communicated through play it is an essential vehicle for personality and social development In recent years play therapists in the western hemisphere as a body of health professionals are usually members or affiliates of professional training institutions and tend to be subject to codes of ethical practice 2 Contents 1 Play as therapy 2 General 2 1 Diagnostic tool 3 Origins 3 1 From Education to Therapeutics 4 Models 4 1 Nondirective play therapy 4 1 1 Sandplay 4 1 2 Winnicott s Squiggle and Spatula games 4 1 3 Efficacy 4 1 4 Research 4 1 5 Predictors of effectiveness 4 2 Directive play therapy 4 2 1 Efficacy 4 3 Application of electronic games 4 3 1 Research 4 3 2 Other applications 4 3 3 Efficacy 5 Play therapy in literature 6 Parent Child Play Therapy 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksPlay as therapy editJean Piaget emphasized play as an essential expression of children s feelings especially because they do not know how to communicate their feelings with words 3 Play helps a child develop a sense of true self and a mastery over their innate abilities resulting in a sense of worth and aptitude 4 During play children are driven to meet the essential need of exploring and affecting their environment Play also contributes in the advancement of creative thinking Play likewise provides a way for children to release strong emotions During play children may play out challenging life experiences by re engineering them thereby discharging emotional states with the potential of integrating every experience back into stability and gaining a greater sense of mastery 5 General editPlay therapy is a form of psychotherapy which uses play as the main mode of communication especially with children and people whose speech capacity may be compromised to determine and overcome psychosocial challenges It is aimed at helping patients towards better growth and development social integration decreased aggression 6 emotional modulation social skill development 7 empathy 8 and trauma resolution Play therapy also assists with sensorimotor development and coping skills 9 10 Play therapy is an effective technique for therapy regardless of age gender or nature of the problem 11 When children do not know how to communicate their problems they act out This may look like misbehavior in school with friends or at home Play therapy seeks to provide a way children can cope with difficult emotions and helps them find healthier solutions and coping mechanisms 12 Diagnostic tool edit Play therapy can also be used as a tool for diagnosis A play therapist observes a client playing with toys play houses soft toys dolls etc to determine the cause of the disturbed behaviour 13 The objects and patterns of play as well as the willingness to interact with the therapist can be used to understand the underlying rationale for behaviour both inside and outside of therapy session Caution however should be taken when using play therapy for assessment and or diagnostic purposes 14 15 According to the psychodynamic view people especially children will engage in play behaviour to work through their interior anxieties According to this viewpoint play therapy can be used as a self regulating mechanism as long as children are allowed time for free play or unstructured play However some forms of therapy depart from non directiveness in fantasy play and introduce varying amounts of direction during the therapy session An example of a more directive approach to play therapy for example can entail the use of a type of desensitisation or relearning therapy to change troubling behaviours either systematically or through a less structured approach The hope is that through the language of symbolic play such desensitisation may take place as a natural part of the therapeutic experience and lead to positive treatment outcomes Origins edit nbsp Little horse on wheels Ancient Greek children s toy From a tomb dating 950 900 BCE Kerameikos Archaeological Museum AthensChildren s play has been recorded in artefacts at least since antiquity In eighteenth century Europe Rousseau 1712 1778 wrote in his book Emile about the importance of observing play as a way to learn about and understand children 16 From Education to Therapeutics edit During the 19th century European educationalists began to address play as an integral part of childhood education They include Friedrich Frobel 17 Rudolf Steiner 18 Maria Montessori 19 L S Vygotsky 20 Margaret Lowenfeld 21 and Hans Zulliger 22 Hermine Hug Hellmuth formalised play as therapy by providing children with toys to express themselves and observed play to analyse the child 23 In 1919 Melanie Klein began to use play as a means of analyzing children under the age of six 24 She believed that child s play was essentially the same as free association used with adults and that as such it was provide access to the child s unconscious 25 Anna Freud 1946 1965 used play as a means to facilitate an attachment to the therapist and supposedly gain access to the child s psyche 26 Arguably the first documented case describing a proto therapeutic use of play was in 1909 when Sigmund Freud published his work with Little Hans a five year old child suffering from a horse phobia Freud saw him once briefly and recommended his father take note of Hans play to provide observations which might assist the child The case of Little Hans was the first case where a child s difficulty was adduced to emotional factors 27 28 Models edit nbsp An individual engaging in sandplay therapy nbsp Equipment used for sandplay therapy nbsp H G Wells Floor Games 1911 inspired Margaret Lowenfeld s play therapyPlay therapy can be divided into two basic types non directive and directive Non directive play therapy is a non intrusive method in which children are encouraged to play in the expectation that this will alleviate their problems as perceived by their care givers and other adults It is often classified as a psychodynamic therapy In contrast directed play therapy is a method that includes more structure and guidance by the therapist as children work through emotional and behavioural difficulties through play It often contains a behavioural component and the process includes more prompting by the therapist 29 Both types of play therapy have received at least some empirical support 30 On average play therapy treatment groups when compared to control groups improve by 8 standard deviations 30 31 Jessie Taft 1933 Otto Rank s American translator 32 and Frederick H Allen 1934 developed an approach they entitled relationship therapy 33 The primary emphasis is placed on the emotional relationship between the therapist and the child The focus is placed on the child s freedom and strength to choose Virginia Axline a child therapist from the 1950s applied Carl Rogers work to children Rogers had explored the work of the therapist relationship and developed non directive therapy later called Client Centred Therapy 34 Axline summarized her concept of play therapy in her article Entering the child s world via play experiences She described play as a therapeutic experience that allows the child to express themselves in their own way and time That type of freedom allows adults and children to develop a secure relationship Progressive Education 27 p 68 Axline also wrote Dibs in Search of Self which describes a series of play therapy sessions over a period of a year 35 Nondirective play therapy edit Non directive play therapy may encompass child psychotherapy and unstructured play therapy It is guided by the notion that if given the chance to speak and play freely in appropriate therapeutic conditions troubled children and young people will be helped towards resolving their difficulties Non directive play therapy is generally regarded as mainly non intrusive 36 The hallmark of non directive play therapy is that it has minimal constraints apart from the frame and thus can be used at any age 37 These approaches to therapy may originate from Margaret Lowenfeld Anna Freud Donald Winnicott Michael Fordham Dora Kalff all of them child specialists or even from the adult therapist Carl Rogers non directive psychotherapy and in his characterisation of the optimal therapeutic conditions Virginia Axline adapted Carl Rogers s theories to child therapy in 1946 and is widely considered the founder of this therapy 38 Different techniques have since been established that fall under the realm of non directive play therapy including traditional sandplay therapy play therapy using provided toys and Winnicott s Squiggle and Spatula games Each of these forms is covered briefly below Using toys in non directive play therapy with children is a method used by child psychotherapists and play therapists These approaches are derived from the way toys were used in Anna Freud s theoretical orientation 39 The idea behind this method is that children will be better able to express their feelings toward themselves and their environment through play with toys than through verbalisation of their feelings Through this experience children may be able to achieve catharsis gain more stability and enjoyment in their emotions and test their own reality 40 Popular toys used during therapy are animals dolls hand puppets soft toys crayons and cars Therapists have deemed such objects as more likely to open imaginative play or creative associations both of which are important in expression 39 Sandplay edit nbsp An adult exampleJungian analytical method of psychotherapy using a tray of sand and miniature symbolic figures is attributed to Dr Margaret Lowenfeld a paediatrician interested in child psychology who pioneered her World Technique in 1929 drawn from the writer H G Wells and his Floor Games published in 1911 41 Dora Kalff who studied with her combined Lowenfeld s World Technique with Carl Jung s idea of the collective unconscious and received Lowenfeld s permission to name her version of the work sandplay 42 As in traditional non directive play therapy research has shown that allowing an individual to freely play with the sand and accompanying objects in the contained space of the sandtray 22 5 x 28 5 can facilitate a healing process as the unconscious expresses itself in the sand and influences the sand player When a client creates scenes in the sandtray little instruction is provided and the therapist offers little or no talk during the process This protocol emphasises the importance of holding what Kalff referred to as the free and protected space to allow the unconscious to express itself in symbolic non verbal play Upon completion of a tray the client may or may not choose to talk about his or her creation and the therapist without the use of directives and without touching the sandtray may offer supportive response that does not include interpretation The rationale is that the therapist trusts and respects the process by allowing the images in the tray to exert their influence without interference 43 Sandplay Therapy can be used during individual sessions The limitations presented by the boundaries of the sandtray can serve as physical and symbolic limitations to unconscious symbolic matherial that can be further reflected in analytical dialogue The ISST International Society for Sandplay Therapy defines guidelines for training in Sandplay Therapy as well as guidelines for becoming a teaching therapist Winnicott s Squiggle and Spatula games edit Main article Donald Woods Winnicott Donald Winnicott probably first came upon the central notion of play from his collaboration in wartime with the psychiatric social worker Clare Britton later a psychoanalyst and his second wife who in 1945 published an article on the importance of play for children 44 By playing he meant not only the ways that children of all ages play but also the way adults play through making art or engaging in sports hobbies humour meaningful conversation etc Winnicott believed that it was only in playing that people are entirely their true selves so it followed that for psychoanalysis to be effective it needed to serve as a mode of playing Two of the playing techniques Winnicott used in his work with children were the squiggle game and the spatula game The first involved Winnicott drawing a shape for the child to play with and extend or vice versa a practice extended by his followers into that of using partial interpretations as a squiggle for a patient to make use of 45 The second involved Winnicott placing a spatula medical tongue depressor within the child s reach for her him to play with 46 Winnicott considered that babies will be automatically attracted to an object reach for it and then discover what they intend to do with it after a while 47 p 75 6 From the child s initial hesitation in making use of the spatula Winnicott derived his idea of the necessary period of hesitation in childhood or analysis which makes possible a true connection to the toy interpretation or object presented for transference 45 p 12 Efficacy edit nbsp Winnie The Pooh the original Winnie possibly Christopher Robin s transitional objectWinnicott came to consider that Playing takes place in the potential space between the baby and the mother figure T he initiation of playing is associated with the life experience of the baby who has come to trust the mother figure 47 Potential space was Winnicott s term for a sense of an inviting and safe interpersonal field in which one can be spontaneously playful while at the same time connected to others 45 p 162 Playing can also be seen in the use of a transitional object a term Winnicott coined for an object such as a teddy bear which may have a quality for a small child of being both real and made up at the same time Winnicott pointed out that no one demands that a toddler explain whether his Binky is a real bear or a creation of the child s own imagination and went on to argue that it was very important that the child be allowed to experience the Binky as being in an undefined transitional status between the child s imagination and the real world outside the child 47 p 169 For Winnicott one of the most important and precarious stages of development was in the first three years of life when an infant grows into a child with an increasingly separate sense of self in relation to a larger world of other people In health the child learns to bring his or her spontaneous real self into play with others whereas in a False self disorder the child may find it unsafe or impossible to do so and instead may feel compelled to hide the true self from other people and pretend to be whatever they want instead 48 Playing with a transitional object can be an important early bridge between self and other which helps a child develop the capacity to be creative and genuine in relationships 47 p 170 2 Research edit Play therapy has been considered to be an established and popular mode of therapy for children for over sixty years 49 Critics of play therapy have questioned the effectiveness of the technique for use with children and have suggested using other interventions with greater empirical support such as Cognitive behavioral therapy 29 They also argue that therapists focus more on the institution of play rather than the empirical literature when conducting therapy 50 Classically Lebo argued against the efficacy of play therapy in 1953 and Phillips reiterated his argument again in 1985 Both claimed that play therapy lacks in several areas of hard research Many studies included small sample sizes which limits the generalisability and many studies also only compared the effects of play therapy to a control group Without a comparison to other therapies it is difficult to determine if play therapy really is the most effective treatment 51 52 Recent play therapy researchers have worked to conduct more experimental studies with larger sample sizes specific definitions and measures of treatment and more direct comparisons 50 Outside of the psychoanalytic child psychotherapy field which is well annotated 53 54 research is comparatively lacking in other or random applications on the overall effectiveness of using toys in non directive play therapy Dell Lebo found that out of a sample of over 4 000 children those who played with recommended toys vs non recommended or no toys during non directive play therapy were no more likely to verbally express themselves to the therapist Examples of recommended toys would be dolls or crayons while example of non recommended toys would be marbles or a checkers board game 39 There is also ongoing controversy in choosing toys for use in non directive play therapy with choices being largely made through intuition rather than through research 40 However other research shows that following specific criteria when choosing toys in non directive play therapy can make treatment more efficacious Criteria for a desirable treatment toy include a toy that facilitates contact with the child encourages catharsis and lead to play that can be easily interpreted by a therapist 40 Several meta analyses have shown promising results about the efficacy of non directive play therapy Meta analysis by authors LeBlanc and Ritchie 2001 found an effect size of 0 66 for non directive play therapy 36 This finding is comparable to the effect size of 0 71 found for psychotherapy used with children 55 indicating that both non directive play and non play therapies are almost equally effective in treating children with emotional difficulties Meta analysis by authors Ray Bratton Rhine and Jones 2001 found an even larger effect size for nondirective play therapy with children performing at 0 93 standard deviations better than non treatment groups 29 These results are stronger than previous meta analytic results which reported effect sizes of 0 71 55 0 71 56 and 0 66 36 Meta analysis by authors Bratton Ray Rhine and Jones 2005 also found a large effect size of 0 92 for children being treated with non directive play therapy 30 Results from all meta analyses indicate that non directive play therapy has been shown to be just as effective as psychotherapy used with children and even generates higher effect sizes in some studies 29 30 Predictors of effectiveness edit There are several predictors that may also influence how effectiveness play therapy is with children The number of sessions is a significant predictor in post test outcomes with more sessions being indicative of higher effect sizes 29 Positive effects can be seen with 16 sessions 38 however there is a peak effect when a child can complete 35 40 sessions 36 An exception is children that undergo play therapy in critical incident settings such as hospitals and domestic violence shelters Results from studies that looked at these children indicated a large positive effect size after only 7 sessions which shows that children in crisis may respond more readily to treatment 30 Parental involvement is also a significant predictor of positive play therapy results This involvement generally entails participation in each session with the therapist and the child 57 Parental involvement in play therapy sessions has also been shown to diminish stress in the parent child relationship when kids are exhibiting both internal and external behaviour problems 58 Despite these predictors which have been shown to increase effect sizes play therapy has been shown to be equally effective across age gender and individual vs group settings 29 30 Play Therapist TrainingFrequently counselors in the play therapy field address a number of obstacles when it comes to helping children The vast majority of counselors starting off lack the basic knowledge needed to be an effective play therapist Training for these counselors is done through many different techniques such as university counselor education programs workshops in hopes to meet the various needs of the children Different studies are also performed to further assess the progress of the counselor s skill set based on which type of training they pursued Studies have shown that those that studied play therapy through the university level have displayed higher levels of skills attitudes and knowledge The children that need play therapy deal with many different disorders and behaviors and it is imperative that the therapist have these main skills in order for play therapy to be effective Understanding the stages of child development and how play can help assist them with it is an important step to their learning process 59 Play therapist requirements may differ from state to state but generally play therapists need a Master s degree or higher degree in a mental health related subject They must also have demonstrated skills in the field of Child Development 60 After obtaining a degree additional classes and work is needed to obtain a certification as a Registered Play Therapist RPT Additional work includes 150 documented hours of instruction specific to play therapy a minimum of 350 direct client contact hours under Supervision of someone who is a Registered Play Therapist Supervisor RPT S and 35 hours of direct supervision with 5 session observations 61 Directive play therapy edit nbsp Friedrich Frobel s wooden Construction kit 1782 1852 SINA Facsimile nbsp Plastic Lego BricksIn the 1930s David Levy developed a technique he called release therapy 62 His technique emphasized a structured approach A child who had experienced a specific stressful situation would be allowed to engage in free play Subsequently the therapist would introduce play materials related to the stress evoking situation allowing the child to reenact the traumatic event and release the associated emotions In 1955 Gove Hambidge expanded on Levy s work emphasizing a structured play therapy model which was more direct in introducing situations The format of the approach was to establish rapport recreate the stress evoking situation play out the situation and then free play to recover Directive play therapy is guided by the notion that using directives to guide the child through play will cause a faster change than is generated by nondirective play therapy The therapist plays a much bigger role in directive play therapy Therapists may use several techniques to engage the child such as engaging in play with the child themselves or suggesting new topics instead of letting the child direct the conversation himself 63 Stories read by directive therapists are more likely to have an underlying purpose and therapists are more likely to create interpretations of stories that children tell In directive therapy games are generally chosen for the child and children are given themes and character profiles when engaging in doll or puppet activities 64 This therapy still leaves room for free expression by the child but it is more structured than nondirective play therapy There are also different established techniques that are used in directive play therapy including directed sandtray therapy and cognitive behavioral play therapy 63 Directed sandtray therapy is more commonly used with trauma victims and involves the talk therapy to a much greater extent Because trauma is often debilitating directed sandplay therapy works to create change in the present without the lengthy healing process often required in traditional sandplay therapy 65 This is why the role of the therapist is important in this approach Therapists may ask clients questions about their sandtray suggest them to change the sandtray ask them to elaborate on why they chose particular objects to put in the tray and on rare occasions change the sandtray themselves Use of directives by the therapist is very common While traditional sandplay therapy is thought to work best in helping clients access troubling memories directed sandtray therapy is used to help people manage their memories and the impact it has had on their lives 65 Filial therapy developed by Bernard and Louise Guerney was an innovation in play therapy during the 1960s 66 The filial approach emphasizes a structured training program for parents in which they learn how to employ child centered play sessions in the home In the 1960s with the advent of school counselors school based play therapy began a major shift from the private sector Counselor educators such as Alexander 1964 Landreth 67 68 Muro 1968 Myrick and Holdin 1971 Nelson 1966 and Waterland 1970 began to contribute significantly especially in terms of using play therapy as both an educational and preventive tool in dealing with children s issues Roger Phillips in the early 1980s was one of the first to suggest that combining aspects of cognitive behavioral therapy with play interventions would be a good theory to investigate 51 Cognitive behavioral play therapy was then developed to be used with very young children between two and six years of age It incorporates aspects of Aaron Beck s cognitive therapy with play therapy because children may not have the developed cognitive abilities necessary for participation in straight cognitive therapy 69 In this therapy specific toys such as dolls and stuffed animals may be used to model particular cognitive strategies such as effective coping mechanisms and problem solving skills Little emphasis is placed on the children s verbalizations in these interactions but rather on their actions and their play 64 Creating stories with the dolls and stuffed animals is a common method used by cognitive behavioral play therapists to change children s maladaptive thinking Efficacy edit The efficacy of directive play therapy has been less established than that of nondirective play therapy yet the numbers still indicate that this mode of play therapy is also effective 70 In 2001 meta analysis by authors Ray Bratton Rhine and Jones direct play therapy was found to have an effect size of 73 compared to the 93 effect size that nondirective play therapy was found to have 29 Similarly in 2005 meta analysis by authors Bratton Ray Rhine and Jones directive therapy had an effect size of 0 71 while nondirective play therapy had an effect size of 0 92 30 Although the effect sizes of directive therapy are statistically significantly lower than those of nondirective play therapy they are still comparable to the effect sizes for psychotherapy used with children demonstrated by Casey 55 Weisz 56 and LeBlanc 36 A potential reason for the difference in the effect size may be due to the number of studies that have been done on nondirective vs directive play therapy Approximately 73 studies in each meta analysis examined nondirective play therapy while there were only 12 studies that looked at directive play therapy Once more research is done on directive play therapy there is potential that effect sizes between nondirective and directive play therapy will be more comparable 29 30 Application of electronic games edit nbsp An early video game played by two childrenThe prevalence and popularity of video games in recent years has created a wealth of psychological studies centred around them While the bulk of those studies have covered video game violence and addiction some mental health practitioners in the West are becoming interested in including such games as therapeutic tools These are by definition directive tools since they are internally governed by algorithms Since the introduction of electronic media into popular Western culture the nature of games has become more diverse complex realistic and social 71 The commonalities between electronic and traditional play such as providing a safe space to work through strong emotions infer similar benefits Video games have been broken into two categories serious games or games developed specifically for health or learning reasons and off the shelf games or games without a clinical focus that may be re purposed for a clinical setting 72 Use of electronic games by clinicians is a new practice and unknown risks as well as benefits may arise as the practice becomes more mainstream 73 Research edit Most of the current research relating to electronic games in therapeutic settings is focused on alleviating the symptoms of depression primarily in adolescents However some games have been developed specifically for children with anxiety and Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ADHD 74 75 The same company behind the latter intends to create electronic treatments for children on the autism spectrum and those living with Major depressive disorder among other disorders 76 The favoured approach for mental health treatment is through Cognitive behavioral therapy CBT 77 While this method is effective it is not without its limitations for example boredom with the material patients forgetting or not practicing techniques outside of a session or the accessibility of care 78 It is these areas that therapists hope to address through the use of electronic games Preliminary research has been done with small groups and the conclusions drawn warrant studying the issue in greater depth 79 Role playing games RPGs are the most common type of electronic game used as part of therapeutic interventions These are games where players assume roles and outcomes depend on the actions taken by the player in a virtual world 80 Psychologists are able to gain insights into the elements of the capability of the patient to create or experiment with an alternate identity There are also those who underscore the ease in the treatment process since playing an RPG as a treatment situation is often experienced as an invitation to play which makes the process safe and without risk of exposure or embarrassment 81 The most well known and well documented RPG style game used in treatment is SPARX Taking place in a fantasy world SPARX users play through seven levels each lasting about half an hour and each level teaching a technique to overcome depressive thoughts and behaviours Reviews of the study have found the game treatment comparable to CBT only therapy 78 82 However one review noted that SPARX alone is not more effective than standard CBT treatment 83 There are also studies that found role playing games when combined with the Adlerian Play Therapy AdPT techniques lead to increased psychosocial development 84 ReachOutCentral is geared toward youth and teens providing gamified information on the intersection of thoughts feelings and behavior An edition developed specifically to aid clinicians ReachOutPro offers more tools to increase patients engagement 85 Other applications edit nbsp Typical Tetris GameBiofeedback sometimes known as applied psychophysiological feedback media is more suited to treating a range of anxiety disorders Biofeedback tools are able to measure heart rate skin moisture blood flow and brain activity to ascertain stress levels 86 with a goal of teaching stress management and relaxation techniques The development of electronic games using this equipment is still in its infancy and thus few games are on the market The Journey to Wild Divine s developers have asserted that their products are a tool not a game though the three instalments contain many game elements Conversely Freeze Framer s design is reminiscent of an Atari system Three simplistic games are included in Freeze Framer s 2 0 model using psychophysiological feedback as a controller 87 The effectiveness of both pieces of software saw significant changes in participants depression levels 82 A biofeedback game initially designed to assist with anxiety symptoms Relax to Win was similarly found to have broader treatment applications 88 Extended Attention Span Training EAST developed by NASA to gauge the attention of pilots was remodeled as an ADHD aid Brain waves of participants were monitored during play of commercial video games available on PlayStation and the difficulty of the games increased as participants attention waned The efficacy of this treatment is comparable to traditional ADHD intervention 89 Several online only or mobile games Re Mission Personal Investigator 90 Treasure Hunt 91 and Play Attention 92 have been specifically noted for use in alleviating disorders other than those for anxiety and mood 93 Re Mission 2 especially targets children the game having been designed with the knowledge that today s western youth are immersed in digital media 94 Mobile applications for anxiety depression relaxation and other areas of mental health are readily available in the Android Play Store and the Apple App Store 95 The proliferation of laptops mobile phones and tablets means one can access these apps at any time in any place Many of them are low cost or even free and the games do not need to be complex to be of benefit Playing a three minute game of Tetris has the potential to curb a number of cravings 96 a longer play time could reduce flashback symptoms from posttraumatic stress disorder 97 and an initial study found that a visual spatial game such as Tetris or Candy Crush when played closely following a traumatic event could be used as a therapeutic vaccine to prevent future flashbacks 98 Efficacy edit While the field of allowing electronic media a place in a therapist s office is new the equipment is not necessarily so Most western children are familiar with modern PCs consoles and handheld devices even if the practitioner is not An even more recent addition to interacting with a game environment is virtual reality equipment which both adolescent and clinician might need to learn to use properly The umbrella term for the preliminary studies done with VR is Virtual reality exposure therapy VRET This research is based on traditional exposure therapy and has been found to be more effective for participants than for those placed in a wait list control group 93 though not as effective as in person treatments One study tracked two groups one group receiving a typical lengthier treatment while the other was treated via shorter VRET sessions and found that the effectiveness for VRET patients was significantly less at the six month mark 88 In the future clinicians may look forward to using electronic media as a way to assess patients 89 as a motivational tool 99 and facilitate social in person and virtual interactions 100 Current data though limited points toward combining traditional therapy methods with electronic media for the most effective treatment 73 79 101 102 Play therapy in literature editIn 1953 Clark Moustakas wrote his first book Children in Play Therapy In 1956 he compiled Publication of The Self the result of the dialogues between Moustakas Abraham Maslow Carl Rogers and others forging the humanistic psychology movement In 1973 Moustakas continued his journey into play therapy and published his novel The child s discovery of himself Moustakas work as being concerned with the kind of relationship needed to make therapy a growth experience His stages start with the child s feelings being generally negative and as they are expressed they become less intense the end results tend to be the emergence of more positive feelings and more balanced relationships 103 Now there are several published books outlining play therapy and specific techniques within play therapy The Association for Play Therapy has a comprehensive list of play therapy books on their website These books include 101 Play Therapy Techniques by Jason Aronson A Handbook of Play Therapy with Aggressive Children by David E Crenshaw ADAPT A Developmental Attachment based Play Therapy by Jennifer Lefebre and many others that outline Play Therapy and its use in specific circumstances 104 Parent Child Play Therapy edit nbsp Playfulness by Paul Manship 1912 1914Play therapy is an evidence based approach for children that allows them to find ways to learn process their emotions and make meaning of the world around them Play therapy can be used for several reasons including trauma autism behavior attachment and language Training in nondirective play for parents has been shown to significantly reduce mental health problems in at risk preschool children 105 One of the first parent child play therapy approaches developed was Filial Therapy in the 1960s see History section above in which parents are trained to facilitate nondirective play therapy sessions with their own children Filial therapy has been shown to help children work through trauma and also resolve behavior problems 106 Allowing children who struggle with trauma to use play therapy allows for them to work through their trauma and begin to trust beyond it Adults that respond differently to the child s closed off and defensive behaviors will help children start to develop trust beyond their trauma Parker Hergenrather Smelser amp Kelly 2021 107 When parents respond to children defensively the child doesn t trust them due to their past trauma Working with a child centered play therapist allows for the therapist to engage with the child convey messages and is open with the child may express regarding their previous or current trauma The therapist responds in an empathetic and understanding way to allow the child to become openminded and respond in an enjoyable way rather than a self protective defensive way Another approach to play therapy that involves parents is Theraplay which was developed in the 1970s At first trained therapists worked with children but Theraplay later evolved into an approach in which parents are trained to play with their children in specific ways at home Theraplay is based on the idea that parents can improve their children s behavior and help them overcome emotional problems by engaging their children in forms of play that replicate the playful attuned and empathic interactions of a parent with an infant Studies have shown that Theraplay is effective in changing children s behavior especially for children suffering from attachment disorders 108 In the 1980s Stanley Greenspan developed Floortime a comprehensive play based approach for parents and therapists to use with autistic children 109 There is evidence for the success of this program with children diagnosed with autistic spectrum disorders 110 111 Lawrence J Cohen has created an approach called Playful Parenting in which he encourages parents to play with their children to help resolve emotional and behavioral issues Parents are encouraged to connect playfully with their children through silliness laughter and roughhousing 112 In 2006 Garry Landreth and Sue Bratton developed a highly researched and structured way of teaching parents to engage in therapeutic play with their children It is based on a supervised entry level training in child centred play therapy They named it Child Parent Relationship Therapy 113 These 10 sessions focus on parenting issues in a group environment and utilises video and audio recordings to help the parents receive feedback on their 30 minute special play times with their children More recently Aletha Solter has developed a comprehensive approach for parents called Attachment Play which describes evidence based forms of play therapy including non directive play more directive symbolic play contingency play and several laughter producing activities Parents are encouraged to use these playful activities to strengthen their connection with their children resolve discipline issues and also help the children work through traumatic experiences such as hospitalization or parental divorce 114 115 116 The emotional bond formed between a caregiver and their child is called attachment Lin 2003 117 A child having attachment issues is significant because a child can have either a good or bad attachment to their primary caregiver Which can lead to development and behavioral issues as the age depending on the type of attachment When using play therapy for attachment issues it is essential to ease into it because the child could have emotional isolating and the therapy benefits both the parent and child due to being connected on a deeper level It allows the parent and the child to build their relationship and the child to feel more secure with the parent See also editArt therapy Drama therapy Eurythmy Music therapy Froebel gifts Eva Frommer Montessori education Charles E Schaefer International Journal of Play Therapy The P L A Y Project Waldorf educationReferences edit Bion W R 1970 Container and Contained Transformed Attention and Interpretation London Tavistock Publications Reprinted London Karnac Books 1984 Reynolds Cynthia A 2015 Ethics in Play Therapy Handbook of Play Therapy pp 521 537 doi 10 1002 9781119140467 ch27 ISBN 9781119140467 Piaget Jean 1962 Play dreams and imitation in childhood New York W W Norton amp Company Inc pp 166 ISBN 978 0393001716 Winnicott D W 1971 Playing and Reality London Tavistock Homeyer Linda E 2008 Play Therapy Practice Issues and Trends PDF American Journal of Play 1 212 Archived from the original PDF on 15 December 2021 Retrieved 1 June 2018 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wilson Brittany J Ray Dee 11 September 2018 Child Centered Play Therapy Aggression Empathy and Self Regulation Journal of Counseling amp Development 96 4 399 409 doi 10 1002 jcad 12222 ISSN 0748 9633 S2CID 149584925 Swank Jacqueline M Cheung Christopher Williams Sydney A 3 July 2018 Play Therapy and Psychoeducational School Based Group Interventions A Comparison of Treatment Effectiveness The Journal for Specialists in Group Work 43 3 230 249 doi 10 1080 01933922 2018 1485801 ISSN 0193 3922 S2CID 149471176 Allen Kallie B Barber Catherine R January 2015 Examining the use of play activities to increase appropriate classroom behaviors International Journal of Play Therapy 24 1 1 12 doi 10 1037 a0038466 ISSN 1939 0629 DeGangi G Wietlisbach S Goodin M Scheiner N 1993 A comparison of structured sensorimotor therapy and child centered activity in the treatment of preschool children with sensorimotor problems The American Journal of Occupational Therapy 47 9 777 786 doi 10 5014 ajot 47 9 777 PMID 7509573 Cochran Jeff L Cochran Nancy H 2017 Effects of child centered play therapy for students with highly disruptive behavior in high poverty schools International Journal of Play Therapy 26 2 59 72 doi 10 1037 pla0000052 ISSN 1939 0629 S2CID 151963952 Why Play Therapy Association for Play Therapy www a4pt org Retrieved 8 November 2023 Play Therapy Makes a Difference Association for Play Therapy www a4pt org Retrieved 8 November 2023 Kendall Tackett K 1992 Beyond anatomical dolls Professionals use of other play therapy techniques Child Abuse amp Neglect 16 1 139 142 doi 10 1016 0145 2134 92 90014 i PMID 1544025 Kernberg Paulina F Chazan Saralea E Normandin Lina 1998 The Children s Play Therapy Instrument CPTI Description Development and Reliability Studies The Journal of Psychotherapy Practice and Research 7 3 196 207 PMC 3330503 PMID 9631341 Kot S Landreth G Giordano M 1998 Intensive child centered play therapy with child witnesses of domestic violence International Journal of Play Therapy 7 2 17 36 doi 10 1037 h0089421 Rousseau Jean Jacques Rousseau Emile or On Education Trans Allan Bloom New York Basic Books 1979 Frobel Friedrich 1900 The Student s Froebel adapted from Die Erziehung der Menschheit of F Froebel by William H Herford 2 vols London Isbister 1900 01 pt 1 Theory of education pt 2 Practice of education Substantially a translation of Froebel s work with editorial comments and annotations Steiner R The Education of the Child 1907 ISBN 0 85440 620 4 Hainstock Elizabeth 1978 The Essential Montessori New York The New American Library ISBN 0 451 61695 2 Soviet Psychology Play www marxists org Retrieved 15 December 2021 Lowenfeld Margaret 1988 Child Psychotherapy War and the Normal Child Selected Papers of Margaret Lowenfeld Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1 84519 084 2 Heilende Krafte im kindlichen Spiel First edition 1952 8th edition Klotz Verlag publisher Eschborn 2007 ISBN 3 88074 4971 in German Hug Hellmuth H 1921 On the technique of child analysis International Journal of Psycho Analysis 2 287 305 Grosskurth Phyllis 1986 Melanie Klein Her World and Her Work New York Alfred A Knopf Inc ISBN 1 56821 445 6 Dillon M C 1978 Merleau Ponty and the Psychogenesis of the Self Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 9 1 2 84 98 doi 10 1163 156916278X00032 Freud Anna The Writings of Anna Freud 8 Volumes New York Indiana University of Pennsylvania Vol 1 Introduction to Psychoanalysis Lectures for Child Analysts and Teachers 1922 1935 Vol 2 Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense 1936 Revised edition 1966 US 1968 UK Vol 3 Infants Without Families Reports on the Hampstead Nurseries Vol 4 Indications for Child Analysis and Other Papers 1945 1956 Vol 5 Research at the Hampstead Child Therapy Clinic and Other Papers 1956 1965 Vol 6 Normality and Pathology in Childhood Assessments of Development 1965 Vol 7 Problems of Psychoanalytic Training Diagnosis and the Technique of Therapy 1966 1970 Vol 8 Psychoanalytic Psychology of Normal Development Freud s Baby Little Hans 1909 PDF The Case Of Little Hans How Freud Used A Boy s Horse Phobia To Support His Theories www psychologistworld com 2 May 2016 Retrieved 29 June 2018 a b c d e f g h Ray D Bratton S Rhine T Jones L 2001 The effectiveness of play therapy Responding to the critics International Journal of Play Therapy 10 1 85 108 doi 10 1037 h0089444 a b c d e f g h Bratton S Ray D Rhine T Jones L 2005 The efficacy of play therapy with children A meta analytic review of treatment outcomes Professional Psychology Research and Practice 36 4 376 390 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 472 68 doi 10 1037 0735 7028 36 4 376 S2CID 28386012 Morrison T Newcomer B 1975 Effects of directive vs nondirective play therapy with institutionalized mentally retarded children American Journal of Mental Deficiency 79 6 666 669 PMID 1146857 Taft Jessie The dynamics of therapy in a controlled relationship New York Macmillan 1933 Allen Frederick H 1934 Therapeutic work with children A statement of a point of view American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 4 2 193 202 doi 10 1111 j 1939 0025 1934 tb06284 x Rogers C 1951 Client centered therapy Boston Houghton Mifflin Axline Virginia 1964 Dibs in Search of Self New York Ballatine Books ISBN 0345339258 a b c d e LeBlanc M Ritchie M 2001 A meta analysis of play therapy outcomes Counselling Psychology Quarterly 14 2 149 163 doi 10 1080 09515070126334 Lebo D 1958 A theoretical framework for nondirective play therapy Concepts from psychoanalysis and learning theory Journal of Consulting Psychology 22 4 275 279 doi 10 1037 h0048364 PMID 13587760 a b Kendrick P Wilson K amp Ryan V 1992 Play Therapy A Nondirective Approach for Children and Adolescents North Yorkshire UK Elsevier Science Limited a b c Lebo D 1955 The expressive value of toys recommended for nondirective play therapy Journal of Clinical Psychology 11 2 144 148 doi 10 1002 1097 4679 195504 11 2 lt 144 aid jclp2270110207 gt 3 0 co 2 3 PMID 14354045 a b c Ginott H G 1960 A rationale for selecting toys in play therapy Journal of Consulting Psychology 24 3 243 246 doi 10 1037 h0043980 PMID 13850211 Sandplay Influences Lowenfeld World Technique Archived 12 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 24 June 2009 Kalff Dora M 1980 Sandplay Boston MA Beacon Skumin V 1987 Psihoterapiya detej i podrostkov Metodicheskie rekomendacii Psychotherapy of children and adolescents Methodical recommendations in Russian Kharkiv The Ukrainian Republican Council of trade unions resorts Retrieved 7 November 2017 Britton C 1945 Children who cannot play Play and Mental Health London New Educational Fellowship a b c Casement Patrick 1990 Further Learning from the Patient Free Association Books pp 95 and 184 Casement Patrick Learning from Life Lecture presented in Seattle WA 4 June 2011 a b c d Winnicott D W 1973 The Child the Family and the Outside World Middlesex p 146 Josephine Klein Our Need for Others London 1994 p 241 Hall D Kaduson H Schaefer C E 2002 Fifteen effective play therapy techniques Professional Psychology Research and Practice 33 6 515 522 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 514 4911 doi 10 1037 0735 7028 33 6 515 a b Bratton S Ray D 2000 What the research shows about play therapy International Journal of Play Therapy 9 1 47 88 doi 10 1037 h0089440 a b Phillips R 1985 Whistling in the dark A review of play therapy research Psychotherapy 22 4 752 760 doi 10 1037 h0085565 Lebo D 1953 The present status of research on nondirective play therapy Journal of Consulting Psychology 17 3 177 183 doi 10 1037 h0063570 PMID 13061658 Research The Anna Freud Centre Archived from the original on 29 June 2007 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services Evidence Based Practice Unit website CAMHS EBPU Retrieved 11 December 2012 a b c Casey R J Berman J S 1985 The outcome of psychotherapy with children Psychological Bulletin 98 2 388 400 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 98 2 388 PMID 3901067 a b Weisz J R Weiss B Han S S Granger D A Morton T 1995 Effects of psychotherapy with children and adolescents revisited A meta analysis of treatment outcomes Psychological Bulletin 117 3 450 468 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 117 3 450 PMID 7777649 LeBlanc M Ritchie M 1999 Predictors of play therapy outcomes International Journal of Play Therapy 8 2 19 34 doi 10 1037 h0089429 Ray D C 2008 Impact of play therapy on parent child relationship stress at a mental health training setting British Journal of Guidance and Counseling 36 2 165 187 doi 10 1080 03069880801926434 S2CID 55593014 Anderson Cynthia 2022 American psychological association International Journal of Play Therapy 31 3 12 How to Become a Play Therapist Academy for Play Therapy Training Retrieved 6 November 2023 Play Therapy Credentials Association for Play Therapy www a4pt org Retrieved 6 November 2023 Levy David M 1938 Release Therapy in Young Children Psychiatry 1 3 387 390 doi 10 1080 00332747 1938 11022205 a b Harter S 1977 A cognitive developmental approach to children s expression of conflicting feelings and a technique to facilitate such expression in play therapy Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 45 3 417 432 doi 10 1037 0022 006x 45 3 417 PMID 325033 a b Knell S M 1998 Cognitive behavioral play therapy Journal of Clinical Child Psychology 27 1 28 33 doi 10 1207 s15374424jccp2701 3 PMID 9561934 a b Tennessen J Strand D 1998 A comparative analysis of directed sandplay therapy and principles of Ericksonian psychology The Arts in Psychotherapy 25 2 109 114 doi 10 1016 s0197 4556 97 00101 9 Harris Z L Landreth G 1997 Filial therapy with incarcerated mothers A five week model International Journal of Play Therapy 6 2 53 73 doi 10 1037 h0089408 Landreth Garry L Jacquot Willard S Allen Louise 1969 A Team Approach to Learning Disabilites sic Journal of Learning Disabilities 2 2 82 87 doi 10 1177 002221946900200203 S2CID 145138515 Landreth G 1972 Why play therapy Texas Personnel and Guidance Association Guidelines 21 1 Kazdin A E 1991 Effectiveness of psychotherapy with children and adolescents Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 59 6 785 798 doi 10 1037 0022 006x 59 6 785 PMID 1774364 Barnett L 1984 Research note Young children s resolution of distress through play Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 25 3 477 483 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7610 1984 tb00165 x PMID 6746795 Granic Isabela Lobel Adam Engels Rutger C M E January 2004 The Benefits of Playing Video Games PDF American Psychologist 69 1 66 78 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 697 8245 doi 10 1037 a0034857 PMID 24295515 S2CID 15997754 Horne Moyer H Lynn Moyer Brian H Messer Drew C Messer Elizabeth S 2014 The Use of Electronic Games in Therapy A Review with Clinical Implications PDF Current Psychiatry Reports 16 12 520 doi 10 1007 s11920 014 0520 6 PMC 4196027 PMID 25312026 via Psychiatry in the Digital Age a b Granic Isabela Lobel Adam Engels Rutger C M E January 2014 The Benefits of Playing Video Games PDF American Psychologist 69 1 76 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 697 8245 doi 10 1037 a0034857 PMID 24295515 S2CID 15997754 Child Anxiety Tales Camp Cope A Lot copingcatparents com Retrieved 10 November 2019 Robbins STAT Rebecca This Video Game May Help Kids with ADHD Scientific American Retrieved 10 November 2019 Programs amp Products Akili Interactive Retrieved 10 November 2019 What Is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and How Is It Used to Treat Anxiety and Depression Anxiety and Depression Association of America ADAA adaa org Retrieved 10 November 2019 a b Granic Isabela Lobel Adam Engels Rutger C M E January 2004 The Benefits of Playing Video Games PDF American Psychologist 69 1 75 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 697 8245 doi 10 1037 a0034857 PMID 24295515 S2CID 15997754 a b Ceranoglu T Atilla 2010 Video Games in Psychotherapy PDF Review of General Psychology 14 2 145 doi 10 1037 a0019439 S2CID 16331255 Maarse F J Akkerman A E Brand A N Mulder L J M 2006 Clinical Assessment Computerized Methods and Instrumentation Lisse Swets amp Zeitlinger Publishers p 59 ISBN 9781135302634 Meersand Pamela Gilmore Karen 2018 Play Therapy A Psychodynamic Primer for the Treatment of Young Children Arlington VA American Psychiatric Association Publishing p 79 ISBN 9781615370436 a b Fleming Theresa M Cheek Colleen Merry Sally N Thabrew Hiran Bridgman Heather Stasiak Karolina Shepherd Matthew Perry Yael Hetrick Sarah 3 July 2014 Serious Games for the Treatment or Prevention of Depression A Systematic Review PDF Asociacion Espanola de Psicologia Clinica y Psicopatologia 19 232 233 ISSN 1136 5420 Horne Moyer H Lynn Moyer Brian H Messer Drew C Messer Elizabeth S 2014 The Use of Electronic Games in Therapy A Review with Clinical Implications PDF Current Psychiatry Reports 16 12 2 doi 10 1007 s11920 014 0520 6 PMC 4196027 PMID 25312026 via Psychiatry in the Digital Age Crenshaw David Stewart Anne 2015 Play Therapy A Comprehensive Guide to Theory and Practice New York The Guilford Press p 45 ISBN 9781462517503 Home schools au reachout com Retrieved 14 November 2019 Alan Brauer M D 1 February 1999 Biofeedback and Anxiety Psychiatric Times Psychiatric Times Vol 16 No 2 16 Retrieved 13 November 2019 Product Review Freeze Framer www relaxfocussucceed com Archived from the original on 6 August 2015 Retrieved 13 November 2019 a b Wilkinson Nathan Ang Rebecca P Goh Dion H 2008 Online Video Game Therapy for Mental Health Concerns A Review PDF International Journal of Social Psychiatry 54 4 370 82 doi 10 1177 0020764008091659 PMID 18720897 S2CID 18858417 Archived from the original PDF on 4 December 2019 a b Wilkinson Nathan Ang Rebecca P Goh Dion H 2008 Online Video Game Therapy for Mental Health Concerns A Review International Journal of Social Psychiatry 54 4 370 82 doi 10 1177 0020764008091659 ISSN 0020 7640 PMID 18720897 S2CID 18858417 Personal Investigator David Coyle www davidcoyle org Retrieved 14 November 2019 Background www treasurehunt uzh ch Retrieved 14 November 2019 Executive Function Play Attention www playattention com Archived from the original on 26 February 2020 Retrieved 14 November 2019 a b Horne Moyer H Lynn Moyer Brian H Messer Drew C Messer Elizabeth S 2014 The Use of Electronic Games in Therapy a Review with Clinical Implications Current Psychiatry Reports 16 12 3 doi 10 1007 s11920 014 0520 6 ISSN 1523 3812 PMC 4196027 PMID 25312026 Greenemeier Larry Video Game to Help Kids Fight Cancer Scientific American Blog Network Retrieved 14 November 2019 ADAA Reviewed Mental Health Apps Anxiety and Depression Association of America ADAA adaa org Retrieved 14 November 2019 Tetris can block cravings new study reveals Playing on the go reduced cravings by one fifth ScienceDaily Retrieved 14 November 2019 Post traumatic stress disorder alleviating flashbacks by playing Tetris ScienceDaily Retrieved 14 November 2019 Psychological interventions to cut traumatic memories Tetris or Candy Crush Researchers see a role for games such as ScienceDaily Retrieved 14 November 2019 Granic Isabela Lobel Adam Engels Rutger C M E 2014 The benefits of playing video games American Psychologist 69 1 71 doi 10 1037 a0034857 ISSN 1935 990X PMID 24295515 S2CID 15997754 Wilkinson Nathan Ang Rebecca P Goh Dion H 2008 Online Video Game Therapy for Mental Health Concerns A Review International Journal of Social Psychiatry 54 4 377 378 doi 10 1177 0020764008091659 ISSN 0020 7640 PMID 18720897 S2CID 18858417 Fleming Theresa M Cheek Colleen Merry Sally N Thabrew Hiran Bridgman Heather Tasiak Karolina Shepherd Matthew Perry Yael Hetrick Sarah 3 July 2014 Serious Games for the Treatment or Prevention of Depression A Systematic Review PDF Asociacion Espanola de Psicologia Clinica y Psicopatologia 19 240 ISSN 1136 5420 Horne Moyer H Lynn Moyer Brian H Messer Drew C Messer Elizabeth S 2014 The Use of Electronic Games in Therapy A Review with Clinical Implications PDF Current Psychiatry Reports 16 12 5 doi 10 1007 s11920 014 0520 6 PMC 4196027 PMID 25312026 via Psychiatry in the Digital Age Malik Fatima Marwaha Raman 2022 Developmental Stages of Social Emotional Development In Children StatPearls StatPearls Publishing PMID 30521240 Play Therapy Books Association for Play Therapy www a4pt org Retrieved 8 November 2023 Draper K Siegel C White J Solis C M Mishna F 2009 Preschoolers parents and teachers PPT a preventive intervention with an at risk population International Journal of Group Psychotherapy 59 2 221 242 doi 10 1521 ijgp 2009 59 2 221 PMID 19441968 S2CID 40246944 Rye N 2008 Filial therapy for enhancing relationships in families The Journal of Family Health Care 18 5 179 181 PMID 18973091 Parker M Hergenrather K Smelser Q Kelly C 2021 Exploring Child Centered Play Therapy and Trauma A Systematic Review of Literature International Journal of Play Therapy 30 2 13 doi 10 1037 pla0000136 S2CID 225545618 Booth P B amp Jernberg A M 2010 Theraplay Helping Parents and Children Build Better Relationships Through Attachment Based Play San Francisco CA Josey Bass Greenspan S I amp Wieder S 2006 Engaging Autism Using the Floortime Approach to Help Children Relate Communicate and Think Cambridge MA Da Capo Press Greenspan S I Wieder S 1997 Developmental patterns and outcomes in infants and children with disorders in relating and communicating A chart review of 200 cases of children with autistic spectrum disorders Journal of Developmental and Learning Disorders 1 87 141 Solomon R J Necheles C Ferch and D Bruckman 2007 Pilot study of a parent training program for young children with autism The P L A Y Project Home Consultation program Autism Vol 11 3 205 224 Cohen J L 2001 Playful Parenting New York NY Ballantine Books ISBN 978 0345442864 Bratton S Landreth G Kellam T amp Blackard S 2006 Child Parent Relationship Therapy CPRT Treatment Manual A 10 Session filial therapy model New York NY Routledge The manual includes a CD ROM of all training materials for ease of reproduction Solter A 2013 Attachment Play How to Solve Children s Behavior Problems with Play Laughter and Connection Goleta CA Shining Star Press Baltrotsky Kathryn Bradbury Joanne Rose Marion Grace Sandra Doran Frances 2022 Evaluation of a Brief Attachment Based Parenting Program Aware Parenting Child amp Family Behavior Therapy 45 54 75 doi 10 1080 07317107 2022 2141600 S2CID 253329670 O Reilly L 2020 The Introduction of Attachment Play in Child and Family Social Work Optimising Connection Emotional Release and Supporting Challenging Behavior The Irish Social Worker 67 76 Lin Shi 2003 Facilitating Constructive Parent Child Play Family Therapy with Young Children Journal of Family Psychotherapy 14 19 31 doi 10 1300 J085v14n03 02 S2CID 141709126 Further reading editAxline V 1947 Nondirective therapy for poor readers Journal of Consulting Psychology 11 61 69 Axline V 1969 revised ed Play Therapy New York Ballantine Books Barrett C Hampe T E amp Miller L 1978 Research on child psychotherapy In Garfield S amp Bergin A Eds Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change New York Wiley Freud A 1946 The psycho analytic treatment of children London Imago Freud A 1965 The psycho analytical treatment of children New York International Universities Press Freud S 1909 The case of Little Hans and the Rat Man London Hogarth Press Froebel 1903 The education of man New York D Appleton Guerney B Guerney L amp Andronico M 1976 The therapeutic use of children s play New York Jason Aronson Grant Robert Jason Ed with Stone Jessica and Mellenthin Clair 2020 Play Therapy Theories and Perspectives A Collection of Thoughts in the Field London Routledge ISBN 9780367418373 Hug Hellmuth H 1921 On the technique of child analysis International Journal of Psycho Analysis 2 287 305 Klein M The Collected Writings of Melanie Klein in four volumes London Hogarth Press Landreth G L 2002 Play therapy The art of the relationship 2nd ed New York Second Edition 2002 ISBN 1 58391 327 0 Brunner Routledge Lanyado Monica and Horne Ann Eds 1999 The Handbook of Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy Psychoanalytic Approaches London Routledge ISBN 9780203135341 DOI https doi org 10 4324 9780203135341 Lowenfeld M 1939 The world pictures of children A method of recording and studying them British Journal of Medical Psychology 18 65 101 doi 10 1111 j 2044 8341 1939 tb00710 x O Connor Kevin J Schaefer Charles E Braverman Lisa D eds 2015 Handbook of Play Therapy 2nd Edition Wiley ISBN 978 1 118 85983 4 Phillips R Landreth G 1998 Play therapists on play therapy Part 2 Clinical issues in play therapy International Journal of Play Therapy 6 2 1 24 doi 10 1037 h0089416 Schaefer C 1993 The therapeutic powers of play New Jersey Jason Aronson Schaefer Charles E Kaduson Heidi 2006 Contemporary Play Therapy Theory Research and Practice United Kingdom Guilford Publications Winnicott D W 1971 The Piggle An Account of the Psychoanalytic Treatment of a Little Girl London Hogarth Press ISBN 0 140 1466 79External links editLibrary resources about Play therapy Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Association of Child Psychotherapists ACP the professional body for Psychoanalytic Child and Adolescent Psychotherapists in the UK Arquetipo Ludi Spanish Canadian Association of Play Therapy Association of Play Therapy British Association of Play Therapists Play Therapy International Play Therapy United Kingdom The Play Therapy Institute Play Therapy Australia British Association of Clinical Play Therapists Sandtray Therapy The Squiggle Foundation London Archived 1 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Play therapy amp oldid 1217823688 Sandplay Sand Tray, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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