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Working with Children and Adolescents with Medically Unexplained Physical Symptoms (MUPS). Dedee Caplin, PhD , Associate Professor, Pediatrics University of Utah School of Medicine Primary Children’s Hospital. Disclosure Statement. I have no relationships or conflicts to disclose.
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Working with Children and Adolescents with Medically Unexplained Physical Symptoms (MUPS) Dedee Caplin, PhD, Associate Professor, Pediatrics University of Utah School of Medicine Primary Children’s Hospital
Disclosure Statement • I have no relationships or conflicts to disclose.
Session Objectives • Understand what MUPS are and how they present at school. • Identify the multifactorial components and triggers to MUPS in the school environment. • Provide a model for effectively communicating/ educating about MUPS to teachers, students and families. • Identify ways to effectively collaborate with medical/mental health providers to manage kids with MUPS at school
What are MUPS? • Medically Unexplained Physical Symptoms (MUPS) are clinical presentations where symptoms or impairment cannot be fully explained by a known organic pathology or medical evidence • Conversion disorder (syncope, gait disturbance, etc.) • Undifferentiated somatoform disorders • Chronic pain syndromes, • IBS and chronic abdominal pain • Pseudoseizure • Chronic or daily headache • Chronic fatigue
Does this sound familiar? • 10th grade student is experiencing daily headache, dizziness, fatigue, and difficulty concentrating following a possible mild concussion • She is worried about not being liked and being “picked on” by peers and teachers, especially because of her current limitations • She is experiencing declining grades and struggles with attendance missing at least 3 days per week • When you meet her, she appears healthier than her description, despite rating her pain at a 10/10 most of the time
What is your role in her care? • The family has heard about some kind of Medical 504 thing that will allow their to not have to make up missed work • The family would prefer that she be placed on home and hospital because she is not capable of going to school • The medical team is calling you arguing that she NEEDS to be in school
Who are these kids? In clinic • Children with MUPS present frequently in the hospital, to numerous subspecialty clinics and to their PCP. • From a medical perspective they are time intensive, demanding, and difficult to assess and treat. • Families tend to deny any psychological factors, are wary of psychiatric services and as a result are difficult to engagebut evidence suggests that behavioral health is the optimal place for care. • They are often upset with the medical team for failing to find an explanation for the symptoms and feel misunderstood. • They often direct treatment with parental anxiety and pressure to “do something”.
Who are these kids? In school • They miss a lot of school and often call to be picked up when at school • They are chronically behind in credits and coursework • They struggle to interact effectively with teachers • They struggle to engage or keep up with peers • They are time intensive, demanding, and difficult to work with • They are often upset with school personnel and report feeling misunderstood often
Schools have a part in reinforcing illness patterns • Giving in to pressure from families to “run the show” • Passes to nurses’ office • Calls home • Excused absences • Taking the path of least resistance • Homebound/homeschool • Gifted grades • Online courses, packets
Communication Content: Things to remember • MUPS are not simple psychiatric illnesses, but rather a complex array of likely contributing factors to the physical symptoms • It is clinically useless to state a cause and effect link between emotional and physical symptoms. • MUPS can arise without concurrent depression or anxiety (psychiatric symptoms associated with MUPS may be the RESULT of symptoms, rather than the cause)
Communication: Introducing MUPS and Treatment • Many things can trigger a single symptom but the body has a limited number of ways to respond to triggers. • MUPS are created and maintained by numerous internal and external factors and require combined medical, behavioral, and psychosocial elements in evaluation and treatment. • The connection between brain and body means that anything mediated through the central nervous system can realistically “cause” symptoms to occur.
MUPS Management Goals: Clinical • To teach kids that their pain or other symptoms may not completely be eliminated, but that they can be functional in all aspects of daily life. • To maximize efforts at increasing self-control of symptoms and tolerance for discomfort with the mantra: Retrain the Brain. • To treat each child is an individual and needs different skills to reintegrate into their environment. • Communication with family, school, and community health providers is the key to a successful treatment plan
MUPS Management Goals: Families • Careful engagement with the family’s concerns and beliefs are crucial. • Family work involving cognitive behavioral techniques aimed at reducing concern about the child’s symptoms • Families often need to be taught gradual reduction of attention to symptoms • Families often need to be reassured that a paced increase in children’s activities is most helpful
MUPS Management Goals: School • Functional Outcome: Attendance first, performance later • Support personnel on campus • To provide support to student when struggling • To prevent calls to home • Reintegration plan • Begin with something achievable like partial days/rest breaks, educed academic demands • Create a formal system of accountability for the school and the family (may be a 504 plan, etc.) • Consistency • Provide regular monitoring and feedback to plan
Questions and discussion • How can we best work together? • What do you need to successfully work with these kids in your setting? • How can you get a child appropriate care in and out of school?
Things you can do • Communicate understanding, empathy, and a desire to help to families • Provide families with explanations and give them “handout” to take back to their medical provider • Encourage families to explore care in all areas, rather than just medical • Encourage communication with teachers and those working with MUPS at school
Referrals for Behavioral Health Care • Pediatric Behavioral Health Clinic • Primary Children’s Hospital • Central Intake • 801-313-7711