Abstract: Mental health problems among children have been increasing in recent years in modern China. Both the available mental health services and the traditional family education philosophy can no longer meet the needs of nurturing the new generation that grows up in a social context characterized by a booming economy, urbanization, changing birth-planning policies, and globalization. In modern China, there is a considerable gap between the need for family education to support children’s mental health and underdeveloped family education and child guidance work. There is also an urgent need to establish a model grounded in tested theory (Individual Psychology), utilizing existing Western models (e.g., the Adlerian parenting approach, corporate social responsibility model) and incorporating the realities of modern China. This study employed a combination of traditional literature reviews and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) framework to generate a new model, incorporating a business model of corporate social responsibility for an Adlerian Child Guidance Center in contemporary China.
Tingting Zhang (Sun,) studied this question.