Child-Parent Psychotherapy
CPP is a treatment for young children aged 0-5 who have experienced a traumatic event and/or are experiencing mental health, attachment, and/or behavioral challenges. Typically, the child is seen with their primary caregiver in a dyadic format. CPP examines ways that the caregiver-child relationship and the child’s developmental trajectory may be affected by: 1) the child’s trauma history, 2) caregiver’s trauma history, 3) caregiver’s relational history, 4) contextual factors including culture, socioeconomic status, sociocultural trauma, and immigration experience. Targets of the intervention include caregivers’ and children’s maladaptive representations of themselves and each other along with interactions and behaviors that interfere with the child’s mental health and the emotion regulation capacities of both child and caregiver. For children exposed to trauma, caregiver and child are guided to create a joint narrative of the traumatic event and to identify and address traumatic triggers that generate dysregulated behaviors and affect.