Yale Child Study Center
230 South Frontage Road
New Haven, CT 06520
Tel: 203.785.2540
The mission of the Yale Child Study Center Outpatient Psychiatric Clinic for Children (OPC) encompasses four major goals: 1) to optimize the developmental potential of children and families by providing the most effective treatment interventions available; 2) to provide interventions based on the principles of child development and child psychopathology; 3) to focus on the importance of family involvement in treatment interventions; and 4) to use data to improve and refine our approach to child and adolescent mental health services.
The philosophy of the Clinic is based on the belief, backed by empirical evidence, that the family and environment in which youth exist play a critical role both in understanding the youth’s functioning as well as in planning and implementing interventions. Youth do not live or function in a vacuum; the evaluation and treatment of the child or adolescent cannot occur in isolation from the context of the family and environment in which he or she lives and it is this philosophy that guides all the Clinic’s efforts in providing clinical care.
Psychotherapeutic services offered include cognitive behavioral treatments for anxiety disorders and depression, trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy for children and adolescents who have experienced trauma, parent management training for disruptive behaviors in children under the age of 12, parent-child interaction therapy for disruptive behavior problems in young children, problem-solving skills training for clients and families, play therapy, and traditional psychodynamic psychotherapy. Parenting skills workshops for parents of children with disruptive behaviors are also offered. In some cases, particularly with older children and adolescents, parenting skills training is not sufficient to address the interactions and relationships between family members and, therefore, we also offer family therapy when indicated. The Clinic also offers social skills training groups for children and young adolescents with social skills difficulties and development of a supportive group for adolescents is underway.
Off-site services include visits to clients’ and families’ homes for the purpose of conducting in-home client and family therapy as well as visits to the clients’ schools generally for the purpose of classroom observations and consultation with school personnel around issues related to the child’s treatment at the Clinic.
The following will be a required part of the fellowship.