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Chapter 14. Psychology and Children’s Health. Eating Disorders. Anorexia Nervosa Bulimia Obesity. 4 characteristics often observed in victims of anorexia nervosa. Most often between 14 and 18 years old Primarily female Often have perfectionist tendencies Face a real risk of death.
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Chapter 14 Psychology and Children’s Health
Eating Disorders • Anorexia Nervosa • Bulimia • Obesity
4 characteristics often observed in victims of anorexia nervosa • Most often between 14 and 18 years old • Primarily female • Often have perfectionist tendencies • Face a real risk of death
Social History of Anorexia Nervosa • 1920s, “flapper” styles - eating disorders increased • increasing prevalence of restrictive eating disorders in the 20th century, in the richer, more industrialized countries with thriving fashion industries • True anorexia nervosa extremely rare in economically deprived groups and during wars and famines
Personality Traits Associated with Anorexia Nervosa • Perfectionist tendencies • Excessive self-criticism, guilt, depression • Driven by need to be thin • Only a few had history of being overweight • Can run in families
The Course of Anorexia Nervosa • Most describe experiences that they believe prompted or precipitated their unusual eating behavior • onset usually quite sudden • Despite even strong objections from others, anorexics deny that they are thin and continue behavior • True anorexic pursues the destructive routine until physically unable to go on
Etiology of Anorexia Nervosa • Why do seemingly trivial occurrences trigger their anorexia? • Despite much study, the etiology of anorexia nervosa remains unclear • genetic factors • hormonal and endocrine problems • obsessive-compulsive tendencies, depression, • Neither genetic nor environmental influences can be ruled out
Treatment of Anorexia Nervosa • correct the individual’s nutrition problem and achieve medical stabilization • Restore a normal diet, which can be difficult if patients resist • Treatment must address a variety of factors since the weight and nutrition problems may be symptoms of other persistent psychological difficulties • Therapy approaches often include family counseling. Family therapy seems to have more lasting effects
Bulimia Nervosa • Bulimia vs. Anorexia • Bulimia Nervosa: frequent episodes of uncontrolled binge eating alternately purging. Can co-occur with Anorexia Nervosa • With Bulimia, individuals usually maintain weight close to appropriate level; with anorexia individual greatly underweight
With Bulimia individuals fluctuate between gaining and loosing weight • With Anorexia, individuals suffer extreme, life-threatening, weight loss.
Etiology of Bulimia Nervosa • Causes of bulimia are somewhat unclear at this time. • Preoccupation with food and have a persistent urge to eat • Those with bulimia seem to have more affective disturbance, particularly depression, than most people. • Higher than normal level of substance abuse, and some report a history of sexual abuse. • Similar to anorexia, bulimia probably stems in part from cultural and social pressures to be thin
Treatment of Bulimia Nervosa • medical evaluation of the individual should be undertaken at the outset. • may be ruptures in the gastric or esophageal areas due to vomiting • metabolic complications from either the vomiting or the abuse of laxatives • Serious dental complications include erosion of tooth enamel from highly acidic vomit
Approaches to bulimia have included medication and various combinations of education, counseling, and behavior management • Antidepressants are helpful in reducing binge eating, despite a substantial relapse rate when discontinued • Various strategies are used in behavioral therapy approaches • Training in self-monitoring
Cognitive-behavioral therapies • basic behavioral management • interrupting the disordered eating and then examining connections between certain cognitions and eating • self-monitoring training and management of self-reinforcement contingencies • relapse prevention and the use of multiple interventions Obesity
Obesity • Obese individuals have excess body fat and weigh approximately 30% more than is considered normal • 5 – 10% of preschool children are obese • 27% of ages 6-11 are obese • 22% of teenagers • Prevalence especially among children has increased substantially in last 15 years
Childhood Obesity • Serious health risk because it usually precedes a lifelong battle with obesity • Depression • Social maladjustment
Causes of Obesity • Theories vary and often appear to be in conflict • One view hereditary or constitutional condition • Physiologically, there seem to be two types of obesity • Hyperplastic obesity occurs when an individual has an abnormally high number of fat cells • Hypertrophic obesity occurs when individuals are overweight primarily because of extremely enlarged fat cells.
Biological or physiological explanations feature the inheritance of a tendency toward obesity or slimness • Many view learned behavior as an important cause of obesity • Research suggests that obesity in youngsters does predict adult obesity
Being grossly overweight has psychological con-sequences as well as physical dangers • negative physical self-perceptions • score lower on general self-worth than non-obese peers.
Treatment of Obesity • Solutions and treatments for being overweight that might seem uncomplicated on the surface, often fail in the context of chronic obesity • behavioral therapies • medical treatments
Treatment must be approached in a systematic fashion • multidisciplinary team (perhaps consisting of a physician, nutritionist, psychologist, and exercise therapist) is more effective • The ability to monitor one’s own behavior is important
Pharmacological Treatments • Drugs that suppress appetite often have a number of undesirable or intolerable side effects • lost weight is rapidly regained once the medication is discontinued • Amphetamine-based medications that suppress appetite, increase activity, and heighten mood have been popular in both over-the-counter and prescription forms • The benefits may be short-lived
Surgical Interventions • restrict stomach capacity, either by stapling procedures or by inserting balloon-type devices into the gastric cavity • These approaches should be employed only in the most severe cases when other therapies have been unsuccessful
Behavioral interventions • Multifaceted behavioral treatment successfully treated obese children • Children only age group for whom weight-reduction programs of any type have produced lasting benefits • Behavioral programs tend to focus on managing eating behavior rather than attempting to change personality
Self-monitoring capacity • Obese people frequently do not realize the unsuitability of the foods they consume and how quickly and often they eat • Self-monitoring allows the person to become conscious of behaviors that contribute to undesirable eating, which can then be targeted for modification
Toileting Problems • Encopresis: Abnormal or unacceptable patterns of fecal expulsion by children beyond the age of toilet training and lacking organic pathology • Enuresis: Recurrent bed-wetting or wetting of clothing at least twice a week for 3 months, diagnosed in children over 5
Encopresis • Retentive encopresis: an excessive retention of fecal material • Non-retentive encopresis: uncontrolled expulsion of feces (incontinence) resulting in soiled clothing and bedding • discontinuous, or secondary, encopresis • continuous, or primary, encopresis • Distinctions are very important in trying to establish causation and devise treatment
Treatment of Encopresis • medical • psychoanalytic • behavioral
Medical treatment • emphasize direct physical control of fecal matter using enemas, laxatives, and stool softeners along with modified diet and sometimes pediatric counseling • In some cases, medication employed to control bowel actions • Most view encopresis as a combined physiological and behavioral problem • Multimodal treatments may include behavioral shaping as well as the physical control techniques mentioned above
Enuresis • DSM-IV-TR cites prevalence for 5 – 10% for children at 5 years of age, 3 – 5% by age 10 and a lingering 1% of 15 year olds • Most clinicians view urinary incontinence after about 3 to 5 years of age as a problem
Functional Nocturnal Enuresis • May happen during the day • Connection between sleep and urinary incontinence • Considerable attention given to the relationship between enuresis and sleep patterns • Some literature relates sleep cycles and sleep abnormalities to enuresis
The Psychodynamic • interprets enuresis as a symptom of an inner conflict • Effectiveness of psychoanalytic treatment has been poorly documented, and there is little research evidence for a success rate
Medical explanations • Include developmental or maturational lag, genetic influences, abnormalities of the urinary tract, and a deficit in cortical control
Treatment • Medications have been used • Fluvoxamine is one popular alternative • Behavioral approaches focus on the environmental contingencies related to urination. • Urine alarms viewed as treatment of choice when combined with other treatments
Sleep Disorders • May occur in 30-45% of very young children • Specific sleeping difficulties, such as insomnia, are reported by a similar proportion of adults
Normal Sleep Cycle • 2 distinct states • REM sleep: period during which rapid eye movements occur and an individual dreams • NREM sleep: lacks rapid eye movements, made up of 4 distinguishable stages • Stage 1 : transitional period between wakefulness and sleep • Stages 2, 3, and 4: characterized by differences in amount and type of brain-wave activity, generally spoken of as increasing in “depth” of sleep
Parasomnias • sleep disruptions associated with specific parts of the sleep cycle, stages of sleep, or sleep-wake shifts • Activation of physiological systems at inappropriate times during the sleep-wake cycle” • Relate to cognitive processes
Nightmares and Night Terrors • Sleep disorders in the parasomnia category • For some children, sleep disturbances are frequent, persistent, and intense, and are then considered serious enough to be considered disorders • tend to happen at different times of night and during different sleep stages. from ordinary dreams
Differences between nightmares and night terrors • Children experiencing night terrors typically sleep through the episode, even though their behavior is extremely agitated. • Eyes are often wide open, as though they were staring at something in terror; they make grimaces and exhibit considerable physical movement, sometimes running about the room frantically; they may also shout and scream.
In nightmares, Children’s movements and verbalization much more subdued, typically restricted to moaning and slight movements in bed
Nightmares followed by a period during which the child is awake, recognizes people and surroundings, can provide a coherent account of what has transpired, and can remember the contents of the dream • Night terrors followed by instant and peaceful sleep, lack of recognition of people and surroundings, and frequently, complete amnesia regarding both contents and occurrence
Causes of nightmares and night terrors • Largely unknown at this time • Theories • sexual impulses that are not understood by the individual or experiences in a previous life • associated with a variety of other conditions such as bronchial asthma, milk intolerance, night-time feeding, and genetic disposition • multiple causes appear to be
Sleep-Walking Disorder (Somnambulism) • Somnambulism and night terrors have a number of common features; not unusual to find both problems in the same child • Can create serious problems since children can place themselves in danger by walking in unsafe places such as balconies and stairways • senses are not functioning in a manner that would protect them from falling or other types of accidents
Most often attributed to some type of emotional stress • Treatment has followed several approaches with varying degrees of success
Dyssomnias • Sleep disorders in which the affected individual has significant and chronic difficulty related to the “amount, quality, or timing of sleep”
Primary Insomnia • Involves a problem in falling asleep that has a duration of at least a month, causes substantial impairment in several areas of functioning, and is not related to substance effects or a general medical condition • Seems to begin in the early adult years and is relatively rare during childhood or adolescence
Causes • Anxiety or worrying is a significant contributor to insomnia • Some evidence suggests that stress, anxiety, and panic attacks are more frequent among individuals with serious insomnia conditions
Treatments • Medication widely employed, but with mixed results • Non-pharmacological treatments have the advantage of avoiding harmful side effects and placing the patient in greater control • Comprehensive behavioral treatment packages have had high success rates
Narcolepsy • Disorder in which individuals encounter “sleep attacks” at times when they are trying to stay awake • often thought of as excessive sleep, but should more correctly be viewed as inappropriate sleep
Cause of Narcolepsy • Largely eluded researchers to date • One factor that has been identified relates to disturbances of REM sleep