BeckDorothy Fahs, Patterns in Use of Family Agency Service, Family Service Association of America, New York, 1962.
2.
See, for example, HallowitzDavid, and CutterAlbert V., “Intake and the Waiting List: A Differential Approach,”Social Casework, Vol. XXXV, December 1954, pp. 439–45; Albert S. Hotkins, Michael Kriegsfeld, and Rosalind M. Sands, “An Interview Group Therapy Program for the Waiting-List Problem,” Social Work, Vol. III, January 1958, pp. 29–34; Catherine M. Bitterman, “Serving Applicants When There Is a Waiting List,” Social Casework, Vol. XXXIX, June 1958, pp. 356–60; Anita Gilbert, “An Experiment in Brief Treatment of Parents,” Social Work, Vol. V, October 1960, pp. 91–97.
3.
RippleLilian, with AlexanderErnestina and PolemisBernice, “Motivation, Capacity and Opportunity as Related to the Use of Casework Services” (prepublication draft, June 1962).
4.
See, for example, ParadHoward J., and CaplanGerald, “A Framework for Studying Families in Crisis,”Social Work, Vol. V, July 1960, pp. 3–15; David M. Kaplan, “A Concept of Acute Situational Disorders,” Social Work, Vol. VII, April 1962, pp. 15–23; Lydia Rapoport, “The State of Crisis: Some Theoretical Considerations,” Social Service Review, Vol. XXXVI, June 1962, pp. 211–17; Lydia Rapoport, “Working with Families in Crisis: An Exploration in Preventive Intervention,” Social Work, Vol. VII, July 1962, pp. 48–56.
5.
Rapoport, “Working with Families in Crisis,”op. cit., p. 49.