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Explore the complexities of child vs. adult psychopathology, internalizing vs. externalizing disorders, normal vs. abnormal development, reciprocal nature of child problems, and dependency issues in children. Understand behavioral disorders like ADHD, ODD, and CD, cognitive disorders like autism, and anxiety and mood disorders. Learn about prevalence, etiology, and treatment options for these issues affecting children and adolescents.
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Childhood & Adolescence I. ISSUES A. Child vs. Adult Psychopathology - Problems less severe/frequent in childhood - Same problem can look different - Some problems primarily in childhood
B. Types of Disorders 1. Internalizing (overcontrolled) = problems within - Less noticed by adults - More common in girls
2. Externalizing (undercontrolled) = manifested externally - Mostly boys - More referred for tx
C. Normal vs. Abnormal Development - Normal at one age = abnormal at another - Period of rapid change - Harder to determine pathology in children “Normal” is age-dependent
D. Child problems are reciprocal 1. Blame the child - Infant temperament 2. Blame the parents - Schizophrenogenic & refrigerator mothers
3. Reciprocal process - difficult kids elicit worse caregiving & vice versa - Intervention = parent-child interaction
E. Children are dependent on others - more likely to get victimized - need parent/teacher involvement
II. Behavioral Disorders 1. Attention- Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder(ADHD) Description • Inattention - especially sustained attention • Hyperactivity • Impulsivity
Inattentive Type • Impulsive-Hyperactive Type • Combined Type • Adult ADD (not an actual dx)
Common complications • Learning problems • Discipline (-> ODD) • Poor peer relations
Prevalence • 3-6% • Boys • Over-diagnosed?
Etiology • Nervous system problem - smaller brain (e.g, frontal lobe) BAS & BIS • Polygenetic – 1 DA receptor implicated • Prenatal smoking • NOT sugar • Parenting can exacerbate, cannot cause
Treatment - 1/3 recover • Stimulant medication - ↑ DA – blocks reuptake - agonist for BIS - works for 75% - few side effects - effects are immediate - reduces inattention & impulsivity -> focus in classroom & at sports -> improves peer relations & self-esteem - cannot teach good behavior
Behavior therapy - Teach appropriate behavior via rewards & punishments - Parent training - School involvement - Must continue for long period • Best = Medication + behavior tx
Summer ADHD Program - point system - parental involvement - double-blind medication trials
Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) & Conduct Disorder (CD) Description • ODD - negativitist, hostile, defiant • CD - truancy, fire-setting, theft, aggression, cruelty
Prevalence • 9% boys • 2% girls
Etiology Family • Parenting: criticism & poor monitoring (indifference) • Parent modeling of poor self-control & antisocial tendencies • Stressful events (divorce)
Cognitive skills • hostile attributions • poor problem-solving Biology • some genetic evidence • lower baseline arousal
Treatment • Parent training - time out/lose privileges & positive reinforcement • Negotiation with adolescents • Cognitive treatments - problem-solving, self-control • Family Systems Therapy
III. Cognitive Disorders Autism (on spectrum – to Asperger’s) 1. Inability to relate to other people - little communication - lack of affection/interest in others - self-absorption
2. Absent or deficient speech ~ ½ = no speech, primitive gestures ~ ½ = some words with oddities (e.g., echolalia)
3. Behavior limited, rigid stereotyped, self-stimulatory behaviors self-injurious & aggressive preservation of sameness
Prevalence • 4-5 in 10,000 (rare) • 75-80% are boys
Etiology • 1940s: Kanner: innate inability to relate (biological) • 1950s: Refrigerator mother => withdrawal (environment) • Current: neurological basis prenatal or birth complications
Treatment • Difficult; poor prognosis • 5% capable of jobs • Still emotionally isolated • Rest = mild care-taking skills • Best: if speak before 5, higher IQ, & mild symptoms
Institutionalization is common • Behavior modification - reinforce social behaviors - sign language - parents & teachers as co-therapists • Aversive conditioning • Facilitation
IV. Anxiety & Mood Disorders Anxiety • School Phobia (not a dx) • Separation Anxiety • Specific fears or phobias • Others as in adults (e.g., GAD) • Fears are common - Extreme degree or duration, impairment
Prevalence • very common to uncommon • equal in boys & girls
Etiology • Biology: fearful, anxious temperament • Learning: observe others’ fears - parents reinforce fears - overprotective parental style
Treatment Behavioral • Flooding • Systematic desensitization • Reward for success Cognitive • Re-appraisal of feared situation • Relaxation strategies
Behavioral therapy = most effective • Medication - not well-documented in kids • ** Best = include parents
Depression • Like adults - sad, crying, hopeless, low self-worth, sleep & appetite problems, lethargy • Unlike adults - behavioral problems, clinging, delinquency
Few consistencies - more like adults than not - similar to adult bereavement (with precipitant)
Prevalence • 5-10% boys & girls, more in teens • equally common in boys & girls
Etiology Biological • possible genetic predisposition Learning • learned helplessness • reduced reinforcers
Cognition • Unrealistically negative • Poor coping • Poor social skills
Treatment • Play therapy (psychodynamic) - child works through conflicts via play - no evidence for efficacy • Social skills training • Increase pleasant activities
Cognitive therapy – errors & coping • Medication - somewhat effective for children - less effective for adolescents • Change the environment*
V. Eating Disorders Anorexia • refusing to eat due to fear of weight gain • distorted body image • life-threatening
Bulimia - bingeing & purging • distorted body image • not usually life-threatening • often normal weight • Key = lack of control
Prevalence • Anorexia – 1-3 % of 12-18 year-olds • Bulimia - ~ 5% of teens/young adults (4.5% female, .5% male)
Etiology • Need for control • Identity issues - independence from parents - fear of growing sexuality • Societal pressures for thinness
Treatment • Family therapy - break power struggle - appropriate separation • Cognitive therapy - Identify & express emotions - Boost self-esteem - Change irrational beliefs Different issues for anorexia and bulimia • Hospitalization - IV fluids & goal weights
VI. Elimination Disorders • Enuresis & Encopresis - wetting/soiling self beyond usual age (~5) • Primary = hasn’t yet learned control vs. - Secondary = learned control but lost
Nighttime is more common - Daytime = maybe serious problem • Sense of no self-control (low self-esteem)
Prevalence • Enuresis: 15-20% of 5-year-olds 5% of 10-year-olds • Encopresis: .3-8% of children usually secondary • Boys
Etiology • Conflict with parents - self-control • Emotional disturbance - anxiety, stress, family disruption • Failure to learn - associate full bladder/bowel with toilet
Treatment • Eliminate biological causes • Deal with emotional disturbance • Behavioral techniques - wake in night after urination (Wee Alert) - praise for success - mild punishment for wetting/soiling • Prevent: relaxed & positive toward toileting