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Welcome to Abnormal
Child Psychology
Jill M. Norvilitis, Ph.D.
Issues that research in this field
addresses
 What constitutes normal/abnormal
behavior for kids of different ages and
both genders.
 Identifying causes and correlates of
abnormal child behavior
 Making predictions about long term
outcomes
 Developing and evaluating methods for
treatment and prevention
Unique to disorders of childhood
 Often not clear whose problem it is
 Problems often involve failure to show
expected developmental progress
 Many problems are not entirely abnormal
 Interventions are often intended to
promote further development
Developmental Psychopathology
 Multiply influenced—psychological,
sociocultural, biological
 Patterns of behavior, emotions, cognitions
that are abnormal, disruptive, distressing
 Either to person or to others around the
person
Defining Psychological Disorders
 Person shows some degree of distress
 Behavior indicates some degree of
disability
 Distress or disability increases risk of
further suffering or harm
Keys to Remember
 Importance of relationships
 Labels and stigma
 Competence
 Frequency/intensity of problems
 Multifinality
 Equifinality
 Accurate views of what is normal
Risk Factors
 Characteristics, events, or processes that
increase risk for the development of psych
problems
 Categories
 Some risk factors are more predictive of
problems than others
 Vulnerability varies
 Risk accumulates
 Some connection between risk factors and
specific disorders
 Number of risk factors is important
Resiliency/Protective Factors
 Characteristics, events, or processes that
protect an individual from the dev of
psychological problems
 Personal attributes—intelligences, self-
confidence, etc
 Family strengths
 Support from outside the family
How common are problems?
 Epidemiology
 Prevalence—total # of cases at a given time
 Incidence--# of new cases in a given period
 Between 1/8 and 1/5 have clinical problem that
impairs functioning
 10-20% meet diagnostic criteria
 10% of those with problems receive tx
 Youngest ¼ of population receives 1/9 tx dollars
Theories and Causes
 Theory—systematic set of statements designed
to help organize, analyze, explain, and predict
 Purpose…
 A good theory should
– Account for the majority of existing research data
– Give relevant explanations/logical reasons
– Be able to be tested for accuracy
– Predict new events, incorporate new info
– Be parsimonious
– Be logically consistent
Etiology
 Underlying assumptions
– Behavior is multiply determined
– Child and environment are interdependent—this dynamic
interaction is called a transaction
– Abnormal development involves continuity and discontinuity
 Adaptational failure—failure to master or progress in
accomplishing developmental milestones
 Developmental psychopathology is a macroparadigm
that draws on multiple perspectives
Freud
 Deterministic
 Mental processes are often unconscious
 Conflict model—id/ego/superego
 Stages
– Oral
– Anal
– Phallic
– Latency
– Genital
 Advantages to this theory
– Helped establish field of psychology
– Emphasized importance of childhood
Updates to Psychoanalytic Theory
 Object relations theory—importance of
relationship with caregiver is key.
– Melanie Klein—healthy relationships as infants
lead to healthy relationships as adults
 Attachment theory—Bowlby 1969,
Ainsworth, 1978
– Secure, ambivalent, avoidant, disorganized
Biological Model
 Hippocrates—somatogenesis
 Late 1800s, bio causes for everything
 Varies by genetic and constitutional factors,
neuroanatomy, rates of maturation
 Neural plasticity—malleability
 It is rare to find a disorder that is completely bio in
origin
 Diathesis-stress model
Genetic Contributions
 ADHD—multiple genes, Huntington’s
Chorea—single gene
 Heritability—proportion of variation in a
given trait that is genetic/inherited
 Concordance rates—MZ, DZ, adoption
Neurobiological Contributions
 Brain structure & function
– Many locations, particularly frontal lobes
– Damage to brain pre or post-natally
 Accident
 Illness
 Malnutrition
 Toxic substances
 Neurotransmitters
– Implicated in many disorders
– Not as well understood in kids
Psychological Factors
 Emotional influences
– Reactivity—differences in threshold and
intensity of expression of emotion &
regulation
 Temperament
– Easy—positive affect and approach
– Difficult—negative affect or irritability
– Slow to warm—fearful or inhibited
Behavioral Theories
 The connection with developmental
psychopath really began with Watson
 Operant conditioning
– Some disorders are more linked to behavioral
contingencies than others. For example,
phobias, enuresis, oppositional problems
 We will talk about this theory more when
we discuss tx
 Social learning theory
Cognitive Behavioral Theories
 Observable behavior can be influenced by
mental processes
 Particularly useful as a theory for
depression (but others as well)
 Automatic thoughts—immediate,
unquestioned thoughts when faced with a
new or recurrent situation
 Cognitive distortions-help develop and
maintain symptoms
Family Systems Theory
 The child is only the identified
 Child’s problems are a reflection of family
problems or problems in marital relationship
 Families want to maintain homeostasis
 Family structures and alliances are often
disrupted
 Communication is also often disrupted
 Can be enmeshed or disengaged
Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological
Systems Theory
 There are many systems and settings to be
considered when trying to understand the
etiology of problems
 Macrosystem—beliefs and values of the culture
 Exosystem-social structures
 Mesosystem-interconnections between various
community systems
 Microsystem-child’s immediate environment
 Ontogenic development—the child’s own internal
development and adaptation
Ethics in Working with
Children and Families
 Competence—can’t just deem yourself
competent
 Multiple relationships—also known as dual
relationships
 Informed consent and assent—must inform
about the kind of therapy or assessment
– Also—must clarify who is the client and what role
each person plays
Confidentiality and Limits to
Confidentiality
 Suicide, homicide, and abuse of a dependent
person
 Tarasoff—duty to warn
 Involuntary commitment
 Children’s legal rights in treatment decisions
 Children can’t be forced to participate, but can
be forced to sit there
Research Ethics
 IRBs
 Non-harmful procedures
 Incentives
 Deception
 Anonymity
 Mutual responsibilities
 Jeopardy
 Informed consent and assent
 Confidentiality
 Informing participants of results
Research in Abnormal Child
Psychology
 Time frame of the study
– Cross-sectional—possible cohort effects
– Longitudinal designs—time consuming,
expensive, drop outs, historical factors
– Accelerated longitudinal designs aka
sequential designs
 Where do we get participants—schools,
clinics, hospitals, community, laboratory
Just a Bit on Freud Himself
 Born 5/6/1856 in Freiburg, Moravia (now Pribor, Czech) to a 40 yo wool
merchant father on his 2nd marriage—remote and authoritarian.
 Mother—Amalie—more nurturing
 Had 2 older ½ brothers, but had nephew 1 yr older
 1859 moved to Leipzig for economic reasons
 1860—to Vienna where Freud stayed until 1938 when Nazis came
 Had brother Julius—one year younger, died in 1858
 Sister Anna
 Age 17—moved by curiosity about human concerns
 Became physician in his 20s
 Trained as a neurologist under Charcot and then under Breuer.
 With Breur treated Anna O in 1895, began to develop own ideas after that
Dora
 Dora began to suffer from a hysterical cough and loss of voice
 Threatened to kill herself
 Freud found multiple sexual conflicts
 Dora’s father was having an affair with Frau K, whom Dora had
adored
 Dora envied both of the lovers and felt betrayed by both
 Frau K’s husband was attracted to Dora and Herr K made advances
to Dora
 Dora’s father didn’t believe her, but Dora was also attracted to Herr
K and had fantasized marrying him but Dora learned he’d been
having an affair with the governess and she was mad.
 But Dora quit tx abruptly
Dora’s Outcome
 Freud had had high hopes for the tx. Wrote it up in only
3 wks
 Book was written as a follow up to Freud’s dream book.
Not intended to convey every treatment utterance.
 In April 1902, 15 mos after termination, Dora
reappeared. She had improved. Had visited Ks—got
Frau K to admit affair and Herr K to admit advances.
 In Oct. 1901—1 yr after beginning therapy, Dora lost her
voice again after she bumped into Herr K on the street.
He stopped and was run over by a carriage. He survived
and her voice got better.
 Later Dora married and Freud wrote that she was
“reclaimed by the realities of life”
The Real Dora
 Ida Bauer, born 1882 in Vienna of Bohemian Jewish
ancestry
 Dora's father, Philip Bauer, was a wealthy textile
manufacturer.
 Dora's brother, Otto Bauer, became a leading figure in
the Austrian Social Democratic Party, a Marxist theorist
who specialized in the question of nationality and
nationalism.
 Dora married in 1903 at the age of twenty-one.
 She continued to suffer from a variety of psychosomatic
ailments throughout her life.
 One of her few satisfactions, a later analyst reported,
was that she knew herself to be the subject of one of
Freud's most famous case histories.
Hysteria
 Originally “wandering uterus”—therefore
only women
 Multiple somatic complaints without any
obvious medical cause
 Overtime took on connotation of
exaggerated or overly dramatic
 Take overpowering anxiety and convert it
into sx (conversion hysteria)
Assessment
 Developmental considerations: age, gender, cultures
 Many purposes of assessment
– Determine levels of problematic emotions and behaviors
– Determine range of problematic emotions and behaviors
– Help identify any appropriate diagnoses
– Identify strengths and competencies
– Evaluate efficacy of treatment by assessing before, during, and
after tx
– Determine etiological factors of problem
– Identify children at risk for dev problems in the future
– Establish prognosis and tx planning
Effective Assessment
(Prevatt, 1999)
 Prereferral used—may be able to intervene before an assessment
 Ecologically based assessment
– Multimodal
– Emphasis on family/school environment
– Avoidance of label/pathology based approach
– Emphasis on why things occur
– Outcome-based
 Adherence to legal and ethical guidelines
 Uses tests with good psychometric properties—reliable, valid,
adequate normative data, cost effective
 Intervention focused
– Strengths and weaknesses
– Learning-based strategies, school, family and community strategies
– ? need for consultations
 Must choose between depth and breadth
in assessment
 Should be multimethod—using several
types of techniques and should use
multiple informants
Interviews
 The most common technique
 Unstructured, semi-structured,
structured
 Rapport
 Weaknesses of unstructured
interviews—not very reliable, may
go off on tangents as they come
up
 Structured and semi-structured
are more reliable.
 May be used in combination.
 Should cover
– Parent and child
 History of current difficulties
 Child’s educational hx
 Home environment
 Expectations for child
 Child’s strengths and
competencies
– Parent only
 Details of pregnancy and birth
 Developmental hx
 Medical hx
 Family characteristics and hx
 Child’s interpersonal skills
– Child only
 Job hx and goals
 Sexual involvements
 Friendships
 Illicit substances
Behavioral Assessment
 Behavioral observation
– structured or unstructured
– look for antecedents and consequences
– most often done in schools
– A-Antecedent, B-Behavior, C-Consequences
 Functional assessment
– evaluation of actual behaviors and child’s ability to
perform these
 Self-monitoring
– allows child to keep track of a specific behavior by
recording its occurrence
 Concern with all of these techniques: reactivity
Checklists and Rating Scales
 Not very expensive, widely used
 Most take 5-15 minutes
 Broad measures: CBCL, TRF, YSR
 Specific measures: CDI, Conners, STAI-kiddie
 Concern—parents’ pathology may increase ratings of
kids’ problems. Kids may downplay problems.
 When looking at CBCL, TRF, YSR
– Those in similar roles (parent-parent) corr about .6, adults in
different roles (parent-teacher) corr about .3, children with
adults corr about .2
– All corrs are higher for externalizing.
– Why?
Personality Assessment
 Ask about functioning without asking about
specific behaviors
 Personality inventories—MMPI-A
 Projective measures
– Ambiguous stimuli onto which individuals project
ideas and feelings.
– Many types-Rorschach, TAT/CAT/RAT, DAP.
Intellectual and Educational
Assessment
 Intelligence tests
– Most commonly employed assessment device beyond interviews
– WISC-IV—10 mandatory, 5 supplementary scales.
– Stanford-Binet
– Both M= 100 sd=15 or 16.
– Criticisms
 Cultural loading and school based quality of some tests
 Focus on speed of responses to detriment of methodical kids
 View of IQ as rigid and inflexible
 Using IQ tests makes IQ real and not a construct.
 Educational tests—Woodcock-Johnson, WIAT, WRAT
Neuropsychological Testing
 Primary purpose
– Find the implications of brain-related deficits and
lesions
– Much more specific than broader measures
 Areas
– Perceptual/sensory
– Motor functions
– Verbal functions/language/communication
– Attention/learning/processing
– Non-verbal functions
Strengths and Weaknesses
of Testing
 Strengths of standardized testing
– Many tests—finding a good one in your area
shouldn’t be hard
– Identifies strengths and weaknesses from a
variety of perspectives
 Weaknesses of testing
– Assumes that everyone is motivated and
honest
– Some techniques may be biased
Classification and Diagnosis
 In dx, we use either categories or dimensions
 Keys to a classification system
– Must be clearly defined
– Groups or dimensions must exist (go together
regularly)
– Reliable—get same dx across observers
– Valid—provide us with useful info, not overlap with
other dx
– Clinical utility
Clinically Derived Systems
 From a consensus of clinicians about which sx usually go together
 DSM-American (ICD-10-other countries)
– Grew out of Kraepelin’s initial classification in 1883
– 1952-DSM-I had 2 categories for children-Adjustment reaction and
childhood schizophrenia
– Adultomorphism
– 1968—DSM-II—new section “Behavior Disorders of Child and
Adolescence”
– 1980—DSM-III—multiaxial
 Now DSM-IV-TR
 5 axes
– I—Clinical disorders
– II—Developmental disorders, personality disorders
– III-General medical conditions
– IV—Psychosocial stressors
– V-Global assessment of functioning 0-100
Strengths and Weaknesses
of the DSM
 Reliability—test-retests is fair for dx such as ADHD, CD,
ODD--.51. to .64
 Inter-rater is better for some than others—autism .85,
ODD .55
 Strengths—common diagnostic language
– Wide acceptance and use
– Multiaxial
 Weaknesses—usually used for classification (not for
understanding or tx)
– Medical model
– Reliability for kids and adolescents behind adults
– Very complex
– Labeling
– Self-fulfilling prophecies
Empirically-based Taxonomies
 Collect info in a standardized manner from
a large N of kids
 Analyze data through statistical means
 Explore associations between sx
 Develop scales based on these behavioral
items
 CBCL by Thomas Achenbach
Therapeutic Interventions
 Settings for interventions
– Inpatient settings
– Residential tx facilities
– Group homes/therapeutic foster care homes
– Day hospitals
– Outpt settings
– School based mental health services
Involvement in Treatment
 Flisher et al 1997—at least 17% of kids and adolescents
with severe psychopathology never receive tx
 Goodman et al 1997—compared with those who do not
receive services, those who do…
– Experienced higher levels of psychopathology
– Showed lower levels of competence
– More likely to have comorbid disorders
– More likely to be non-Hispanic Caucasians
– Less likely to be prepubertal girls
– Tended to have parents who were
 More educated
 More dissatisfied with their family functioning
 Less involved in monitoring children’s behavior
 More likely to have received tx themselves
Who drops out?
 High SES less likely to drop out
 Attrition is lower when the whole family is
involved
 Most parent factors are not significant
 Congruence between parental expectations and
treatment recommendations is related to lower
attrition
 More coercive referral sources are more likely to
drop out
Does therapy work?
 Consumer Reports surveys say pts are satisfied, but does it work?
 Outcome studies—waitlist controls, no treatment controls, attention-
placebo control, standard tx/routine care control
 Casey and Berman 1985—first large scale meta-analysis
– Tx outcome for those 12 and younger—64 studies—single ES for each
study
– Mean ES .71 -across studies the avg treated child functioned better
after tx than 76% of control kids
– Most tx (other than dynamic) were more effective than no tx
– Behavioral somewhat better than non-behavioral
– Worked whether play or no-play and parents and kids vs kids only
– Tx is somewhat more effective for specific problems than for social
adjustment problems
– Tx effective across observers
– Other meta-analyses have found very similar things
The Next Step in Efficacy
 Goal now is to establish empirically
supported tx for specific problems
 Two categories
– Well-established tx
– Probably efficacious tx (new tx that appears
effective from 1 or 2 high-quality studies)
 Problem—clinic vs. research tx—generally
clinic is less effective
Play Therapy
 One technique to discuss across tx
 Problem: young kids are less
verbal, so play tx uses play to
concretize communications
 2 primary perspectives
 Dynamic—kids can’t do verbal free
association
– Now dynamic people view
play as a mode of expression
 Client-Centered
– Axline—basic principles of CCT—
unconditional + regard, accurate
empathy, genuiness
 Non-directive
 Not a great deal of support for
play therapy as a stand-alone
technique
 Typical play therapy room
contents:
– Tactile materials
– Drawing materials
– Dolls and dollhouses
– Hand puppets
– Nerf balls
– Blocks
– Communication facilitators
Psychodynamic Therapy
 Very little support with children
 Historical importance
 Interpretation of unconscious conflicts
Behavior Therapy
 2 main types—child oriented and parent oriented
 Generally based on research principles
 Child-focused
– Applied Behavior Analysis—focus on antecedents and
consequences of behavior
 Reinforcement, prompting, modeling, shaping, time out,
punish.
– Token economies
– Systematic desensitization
Parent-Oriented Behavior Therapy
 Behavioral Parent Training-Barkley
– Pay attention to and reward positive behavior
– Ignore bad behavior
– Allow natural consequences
– Model appropriate behavior
– Provide consistent and known consequences
– Anticipate and plan for problem behavior
– No idle threats
– Limit the use of punishments
 One 25 year follow up (Strain et al) showed
positive results
Evaluating Behavior Therapy
 Achieves results in a short period of
time—less distress, lower cost
 Methods are clearly delineated; results
easily measured
 Works better with some problems than
others—rarely used for complex
personality disorders
Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
 Ellis—Rational Emotive Therapy
– Sustained emotional reactions are caused by internal sentences that people
repeat to themselves—irrational beliefs
– Eliminate self-defeatingness by rational examination
– Must decide together what to do
 Beck—Cognitive therapy
– Negative beliefs that people have about self, world and future cause disorders.
– Both behavioral and cognitive.
 Ellis—deductive—knows there are irrational beliefs
 Beck—inductive—seeks negative beliefs
 Social problem solving; skills training, assertion training—part of this
 Efficacy
– Less research on Ellis’ model—what is there says that it does not work as well as
Beck’s approach.
Family Systems Therapy
 Family tx
– All members all the time
 Structural interventions
– Change family’s organizational patterns
Psychopharmacology
 Medications are widely used, even if not widely studied in kids
 Zito et al 2000—studied kids aged 2-4 between at three sites/three payees
Stimulants 12.3, 8.9, 5.1 per 1000
Antidepressants—3.2, 1.6, .7
 Antidepressants—limited support, not studied until recently
– Fairly equivocal results
– Only two are approved (Prozac and Zoloft)
– Suicide concern
 Anxiolytics—limited evidence, limited research
 Antipsychotics—older kids with later onset of schizophrenia, higher
intellectual functioning respond better
 Psychostimulants—about 75 % of kids with ADHD respond well. Help
attention and impulsivity but not social skills or academics
 Drawbacks to meds—side effects; message that med use sends
Prevention
 20% of kids have disorders, even 10%
would be a huge need if more than 5% of
those in need got help
 Primary—entire community
 Secondary-children at risk
 Tertiary—prevent recurrence
 DARE
 Head Start
Attention Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder
 Symptoms
– Inattention
 Losing things
 Disorganized
 Can’t follow through on
steps
 Easily distracted
– Hyperactivity
 Talkative
 Driven by a motor
 Run in situations when it
is inappropriate
 Keys
– Before age 7 (but some
studies find little diff
between before or after 7)
– 6 mos duration (may be
too brief for young kids)
– 2 or more settings
– Evidence of significant
impairment
 3 types—primarily
inattentive, primarily
hyperactive, combined
Prevalence
 Lots of controversy, lots of research
 In 2009—25 % of articles in Journal of Abnormal Child
Psychology were about ADHD
 Some controversy about whether it is all one disorder or
two
 Prevalence—3-5 % of kids (2-10%)
– 50-60% when clinical or special education samples are used
– Kids tend to be referred for help between ages 7-9
– 50-80% will continue to have problems into adulthood
– Boys outnumber girls by 2:1, some reports as high as 9:1
Gender Differences
 Compared with boys with ADHD, girls with ADHD tend to
– have lower intellectual functioning
– have lower levels of hyperactivity
– fewer comorbid externalizing problems
– inattentive types
 No gender differences in
– fine motor skills
– social functioning
– academic performance
– impulsivity
– family relationship variables like parental depression or parental
education
Inattention
 May be able to pay attention in some
situations
 Not deficient in selective attention
 Instead a basic deficit in the ability to
sustain attention—CPT, reaction time
 Deficit is context-dependent and task-
dependent
 All of this suggests, perhaps, a
motivational deficit
Hyperactivity and Impulsivity
 Hyperactivity
– Far less robust dimension than inattention
– Some evidence that they are more active on a 24 hr basis
(including sleep)
– Greater restlessness
– Differences most marked in younger kids—decrease. with age
– Situation dependent
 Impulsivity—cognitive vs. behavioral impulsivity
– Act before they think
– Complex tasks—accept 1st solution that comes to mind
– Make very rapid responses, as well as irrelevant and
inappropriate ones
– Do not lack search strategies, but they are deficient
IQ and Academic Achievement
 7-15 pts below avg—not clear if IQ is low or poor test-
taking skills
 Do poorly in school
– Repeat more grades, lower marks on standardized measures of
reading, spelling, vocabulary, and math
– Academic performance decreases with time
– 40% receive some form of special education by adolescence
– Cognitive etiology—core cognitive problems prevent
development of problem-solving
– Motivational factors—school failures lower self-esteem and
undermine desire to achieve as child grows older
ADHD and Memory
 Intact as long as the list of stimuli is
relatively short
 Deteriorates as # of stimuli to be
remembered increases
 Appears that, instead of increasing in
effort as task becomes more difficult,
actually expend less effort and use less
efficient memory strategies
Higher Order Processes
 Adequate on simple, but performance decreases as task
complexity increases
 Word knowledge—2 vs. 5 choices
 When asked to scan an array, they skip around and
focus on novel or striking stimuli instead of processing all
relevant info
 Performance increases with interest in task
 When told about more effective strategies, don’t always
use them
 Poor metacognition
Response to Reinforcement
 Performance will increase if every correct response is
reinforced
 Withdrawal of expected rewards can interfere with
performance, even on simple tasks
 Performance deteriorates when reward is given after
every 2nd correct response or at regular intervals
 Exceptionally strong need for immediate gratification
 Tend to invest more energy and interest in obtaining the
reward than solving the problem (not task-oriented)
Other Characteristics
 Accident proneness—1/2 described this
way
– 15% have had 4 or more serious injuries
– 3x more likely to have accidental poisoning
 Distorted self-perceptions—positive
illusory bias
Comorbidity and
Differential Diagnosis
 Comorbidity—rule rather than exception for ADHD
– Between 42 & 93% for ext, 13-51% for internalizing
 Conduct disorder—20-50%
– CD alone—more antisocial parents, more family hostility
– ADHD alone—more frequently off-task in school and play
– Kids with both have worst features of both
 LD
– 10-92%--Loose defs of LD. Rigorous defs -17-35 %
– Inattention leads to learning probs and vice versa
– Less task persistence in ADHD kids
 Speech or language—30-60% have impairments
– Use fewer pronouns and conjunctions
– Also more formal speech problems
 Differential diagnosis—bipolar, PTSD, FAS, lead poisoning
Course of the Disorder
 Preschool
– 6 mos required of DSM may be too short, at least 1 yr is more
predictive of future problems
– Preschoolers –restless, driven by a motor, impulsive, incr. risk
for accidents and poisoning, moody, demanding of attn., defiant,
noncompliant
– 40% of 4 yo have problems with attention severe enough to be
noted by teachers or parents but, for most of these kids,
problems are gone in 6 mos
– Of 4 yo. with ADHD, only 48% will still have dx in middle
childhood or adolescence
– Those who develop it earlier have greater problems with
cognitive functions, worse family functioning, increased
comorbidity, increased likelihood of it lasting to adolescence
Course of the Disorder
 Middle childhood
– 50% experience peer rejection
– ADHD who aren’t comorbid are in the minority
– ½ will have individual or family tx
– 1/3 will receive some special education
services
– Parents note failure to accept responsibility,
having to supervise self-help activities such as
dressing and bathing, temper tantrums,
immaturity
Course of the Disorder
 50-80% continue to show sx of ADHD
 25% engage in antisocial behavior such as
stealing or fire setting
 50-70% repeat grades
 8x as likely to be expelled or drop out of
school
Course of the Disorder
 Adulthood
– Longitudinal studies show continuing
problems with ADHD, antisocial PD, substance
abuse (31% vs 3% of controls)
– More car accidents/tickets
– Less job stability
– Academic achievement suffers
– No direct connection with criminality—only if
comorbid with CD
Etiology
 No one theory that everyone accepts
 Family-genetic risk factors
– Twin studies—70-80%
– Between 25-30% of first degree relatives of kids with ADHD also meet
criteria
 Neurobiological factors—abnormalities in frontal-striatal region
– Limitations in self-control and behavioral inhibitions (Barkley)
 Family factors—
– Negative controlling mother-child interactions begin when child is as
young as 2 or 3
– Mothers report incr. stress, incr. social isolation, incr. distress
– Interactions improve on both sides when child is given Ritalin or when
Valium is given to mother
– Hoover & Milich—gave kids placebo—mothers told it was sugar reported
increased hyperactivity, were more critical
 Things that don’t cause ADHD—diet, food additives, sugar
Treatment of ADHD
 No known cure
 Medication—1937 math pills
– Effectiveness rates range from 50-95% (about 70%)
– 20-30% show no effects or adverse effects
– When treated—less impulsive, more planful, fewer task-irrelevant
behaviors, more goal-directed, more coordinated—makes beh more
appropriate
– Academic achievement and social skills—not improved—never learned
in the first place
– Can create kids who credit success to medication and failure to selves
– Other problems—can be addictive, can make kids jumpy or zombie-like,
bland mood
 Overuse? About 3% of all school age kids
– 90% of scripts for methylphenidate are in US—at least 5x higher than
other places
– Girls and adolescents are less likely to receive stimulants
– 90% of visits to physician with complaints of hyperactivity result in
script
 At least 50% of kids dx’d with ADHD are not treated in a way consistent
with recommendations of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry
Treatment of ADHD
 Behavioral Parent Training
 Behavioral Interventions in the classroom
– Both are empirically supported
– Basically involve education into observing behavior, reinforcing + behavior, token
economies, appropriate discipline, empowering parents to work with schools,
time out
– Works best for kids 2-11
 Intensive summer programs
 Combination of behavioral methods and medications works best
 Other interventions
– Cognitive-behavioral interventions—may help with problem solving
– Social skills training
– Diet—not effective for majority of kids
– Funny glasses
– Sensory integration training
– Biofeedback?

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ch1to5.ppt

  • 1. Welcome to Abnormal Child Psychology Jill M. Norvilitis, Ph.D.
  • 2. Issues that research in this field addresses  What constitutes normal/abnormal behavior for kids of different ages and both genders.  Identifying causes and correlates of abnormal child behavior  Making predictions about long term outcomes  Developing and evaluating methods for treatment and prevention
  • 3. Unique to disorders of childhood  Often not clear whose problem it is  Problems often involve failure to show expected developmental progress  Many problems are not entirely abnormal  Interventions are often intended to promote further development
  • 4. Developmental Psychopathology  Multiply influenced—psychological, sociocultural, biological  Patterns of behavior, emotions, cognitions that are abnormal, disruptive, distressing  Either to person or to others around the person
  • 5. Defining Psychological Disorders  Person shows some degree of distress  Behavior indicates some degree of disability  Distress or disability increases risk of further suffering or harm
  • 6. Keys to Remember  Importance of relationships  Labels and stigma  Competence  Frequency/intensity of problems  Multifinality  Equifinality  Accurate views of what is normal
  • 7. Risk Factors  Characteristics, events, or processes that increase risk for the development of psych problems  Categories  Some risk factors are more predictive of problems than others  Vulnerability varies  Risk accumulates  Some connection between risk factors and specific disorders  Number of risk factors is important
  • 8. Resiliency/Protective Factors  Characteristics, events, or processes that protect an individual from the dev of psychological problems  Personal attributes—intelligences, self- confidence, etc  Family strengths  Support from outside the family
  • 9. How common are problems?  Epidemiology  Prevalence—total # of cases at a given time  Incidence--# of new cases in a given period  Between 1/8 and 1/5 have clinical problem that impairs functioning  10-20% meet diagnostic criteria  10% of those with problems receive tx  Youngest ¼ of population receives 1/9 tx dollars
  • 10. Theories and Causes  Theory—systematic set of statements designed to help organize, analyze, explain, and predict  Purpose…  A good theory should – Account for the majority of existing research data – Give relevant explanations/logical reasons – Be able to be tested for accuracy – Predict new events, incorporate new info – Be parsimonious – Be logically consistent
  • 11. Etiology  Underlying assumptions – Behavior is multiply determined – Child and environment are interdependent—this dynamic interaction is called a transaction – Abnormal development involves continuity and discontinuity  Adaptational failure—failure to master or progress in accomplishing developmental milestones  Developmental psychopathology is a macroparadigm that draws on multiple perspectives
  • 12. Freud  Deterministic  Mental processes are often unconscious  Conflict model—id/ego/superego  Stages – Oral – Anal – Phallic – Latency – Genital  Advantages to this theory – Helped establish field of psychology – Emphasized importance of childhood
  • 13. Updates to Psychoanalytic Theory  Object relations theory—importance of relationship with caregiver is key. – Melanie Klein—healthy relationships as infants lead to healthy relationships as adults  Attachment theory—Bowlby 1969, Ainsworth, 1978 – Secure, ambivalent, avoidant, disorganized
  • 14. Biological Model  Hippocrates—somatogenesis  Late 1800s, bio causes for everything  Varies by genetic and constitutional factors, neuroanatomy, rates of maturation  Neural plasticity—malleability  It is rare to find a disorder that is completely bio in origin  Diathesis-stress model
  • 15. Genetic Contributions  ADHD—multiple genes, Huntington’s Chorea—single gene  Heritability—proportion of variation in a given trait that is genetic/inherited  Concordance rates—MZ, DZ, adoption
  • 16. Neurobiological Contributions  Brain structure & function – Many locations, particularly frontal lobes – Damage to brain pre or post-natally  Accident  Illness  Malnutrition  Toxic substances  Neurotransmitters – Implicated in many disorders – Not as well understood in kids
  • 17. Psychological Factors  Emotional influences – Reactivity—differences in threshold and intensity of expression of emotion & regulation  Temperament – Easy—positive affect and approach – Difficult—negative affect or irritability – Slow to warm—fearful or inhibited
  • 18. Behavioral Theories  The connection with developmental psychopath really began with Watson  Operant conditioning – Some disorders are more linked to behavioral contingencies than others. For example, phobias, enuresis, oppositional problems  We will talk about this theory more when we discuss tx  Social learning theory
  • 19. Cognitive Behavioral Theories  Observable behavior can be influenced by mental processes  Particularly useful as a theory for depression (but others as well)  Automatic thoughts—immediate, unquestioned thoughts when faced with a new or recurrent situation  Cognitive distortions-help develop and maintain symptoms
  • 20. Family Systems Theory  The child is only the identified  Child’s problems are a reflection of family problems or problems in marital relationship  Families want to maintain homeostasis  Family structures and alliances are often disrupted  Communication is also often disrupted  Can be enmeshed or disengaged
  • 21. Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Systems Theory  There are many systems and settings to be considered when trying to understand the etiology of problems  Macrosystem—beliefs and values of the culture  Exosystem-social structures  Mesosystem-interconnections between various community systems  Microsystem-child’s immediate environment  Ontogenic development—the child’s own internal development and adaptation
  • 22. Ethics in Working with Children and Families  Competence—can’t just deem yourself competent  Multiple relationships—also known as dual relationships  Informed consent and assent—must inform about the kind of therapy or assessment – Also—must clarify who is the client and what role each person plays
  • 23. Confidentiality and Limits to Confidentiality  Suicide, homicide, and abuse of a dependent person  Tarasoff—duty to warn  Involuntary commitment  Children’s legal rights in treatment decisions  Children can’t be forced to participate, but can be forced to sit there
  • 24. Research Ethics  IRBs  Non-harmful procedures  Incentives  Deception  Anonymity  Mutual responsibilities  Jeopardy  Informed consent and assent  Confidentiality  Informing participants of results
  • 25. Research in Abnormal Child Psychology  Time frame of the study – Cross-sectional—possible cohort effects – Longitudinal designs—time consuming, expensive, drop outs, historical factors – Accelerated longitudinal designs aka sequential designs  Where do we get participants—schools, clinics, hospitals, community, laboratory
  • 26. Just a Bit on Freud Himself  Born 5/6/1856 in Freiburg, Moravia (now Pribor, Czech) to a 40 yo wool merchant father on his 2nd marriage—remote and authoritarian.  Mother—Amalie—more nurturing  Had 2 older ½ brothers, but had nephew 1 yr older  1859 moved to Leipzig for economic reasons  1860—to Vienna where Freud stayed until 1938 when Nazis came  Had brother Julius—one year younger, died in 1858  Sister Anna  Age 17—moved by curiosity about human concerns  Became physician in his 20s  Trained as a neurologist under Charcot and then under Breuer.  With Breur treated Anna O in 1895, began to develop own ideas after that
  • 27. Dora  Dora began to suffer from a hysterical cough and loss of voice  Threatened to kill herself  Freud found multiple sexual conflicts  Dora’s father was having an affair with Frau K, whom Dora had adored  Dora envied both of the lovers and felt betrayed by both  Frau K’s husband was attracted to Dora and Herr K made advances to Dora  Dora’s father didn’t believe her, but Dora was also attracted to Herr K and had fantasized marrying him but Dora learned he’d been having an affair with the governess and she was mad.  But Dora quit tx abruptly
  • 28. Dora’s Outcome  Freud had had high hopes for the tx. Wrote it up in only 3 wks  Book was written as a follow up to Freud’s dream book. Not intended to convey every treatment utterance.  In April 1902, 15 mos after termination, Dora reappeared. She had improved. Had visited Ks—got Frau K to admit affair and Herr K to admit advances.  In Oct. 1901—1 yr after beginning therapy, Dora lost her voice again after she bumped into Herr K on the street. He stopped and was run over by a carriage. He survived and her voice got better.  Later Dora married and Freud wrote that she was “reclaimed by the realities of life”
  • 29. The Real Dora  Ida Bauer, born 1882 in Vienna of Bohemian Jewish ancestry  Dora's father, Philip Bauer, was a wealthy textile manufacturer.  Dora's brother, Otto Bauer, became a leading figure in the Austrian Social Democratic Party, a Marxist theorist who specialized in the question of nationality and nationalism.  Dora married in 1903 at the age of twenty-one.  She continued to suffer from a variety of psychosomatic ailments throughout her life.  One of her few satisfactions, a later analyst reported, was that she knew herself to be the subject of one of Freud's most famous case histories.
  • 30. Hysteria  Originally “wandering uterus”—therefore only women  Multiple somatic complaints without any obvious medical cause  Overtime took on connotation of exaggerated or overly dramatic  Take overpowering anxiety and convert it into sx (conversion hysteria)
  • 31. Assessment  Developmental considerations: age, gender, cultures  Many purposes of assessment – Determine levels of problematic emotions and behaviors – Determine range of problematic emotions and behaviors – Help identify any appropriate diagnoses – Identify strengths and competencies – Evaluate efficacy of treatment by assessing before, during, and after tx – Determine etiological factors of problem – Identify children at risk for dev problems in the future – Establish prognosis and tx planning
  • 32. Effective Assessment (Prevatt, 1999)  Prereferral used—may be able to intervene before an assessment  Ecologically based assessment – Multimodal – Emphasis on family/school environment – Avoidance of label/pathology based approach – Emphasis on why things occur – Outcome-based  Adherence to legal and ethical guidelines  Uses tests with good psychometric properties—reliable, valid, adequate normative data, cost effective  Intervention focused – Strengths and weaknesses – Learning-based strategies, school, family and community strategies – ? need for consultations
  • 33.  Must choose between depth and breadth in assessment  Should be multimethod—using several types of techniques and should use multiple informants
  • 34. Interviews  The most common technique  Unstructured, semi-structured, structured  Rapport  Weaknesses of unstructured interviews—not very reliable, may go off on tangents as they come up  Structured and semi-structured are more reliable.  May be used in combination.  Should cover – Parent and child  History of current difficulties  Child’s educational hx  Home environment  Expectations for child  Child’s strengths and competencies – Parent only  Details of pregnancy and birth  Developmental hx  Medical hx  Family characteristics and hx  Child’s interpersonal skills – Child only  Job hx and goals  Sexual involvements  Friendships  Illicit substances
  • 35. Behavioral Assessment  Behavioral observation – structured or unstructured – look for antecedents and consequences – most often done in schools – A-Antecedent, B-Behavior, C-Consequences  Functional assessment – evaluation of actual behaviors and child’s ability to perform these  Self-monitoring – allows child to keep track of a specific behavior by recording its occurrence  Concern with all of these techniques: reactivity
  • 36. Checklists and Rating Scales  Not very expensive, widely used  Most take 5-15 minutes  Broad measures: CBCL, TRF, YSR  Specific measures: CDI, Conners, STAI-kiddie  Concern—parents’ pathology may increase ratings of kids’ problems. Kids may downplay problems.  When looking at CBCL, TRF, YSR – Those in similar roles (parent-parent) corr about .6, adults in different roles (parent-teacher) corr about .3, children with adults corr about .2 – All corrs are higher for externalizing. – Why?
  • 37. Personality Assessment  Ask about functioning without asking about specific behaviors  Personality inventories—MMPI-A  Projective measures – Ambiguous stimuli onto which individuals project ideas and feelings. – Many types-Rorschach, TAT/CAT/RAT, DAP.
  • 38. Intellectual and Educational Assessment  Intelligence tests – Most commonly employed assessment device beyond interviews – WISC-IV—10 mandatory, 5 supplementary scales. – Stanford-Binet – Both M= 100 sd=15 or 16. – Criticisms  Cultural loading and school based quality of some tests  Focus on speed of responses to detriment of methodical kids  View of IQ as rigid and inflexible  Using IQ tests makes IQ real and not a construct.  Educational tests—Woodcock-Johnson, WIAT, WRAT
  • 39. Neuropsychological Testing  Primary purpose – Find the implications of brain-related deficits and lesions – Much more specific than broader measures  Areas – Perceptual/sensory – Motor functions – Verbal functions/language/communication – Attention/learning/processing – Non-verbal functions
  • 40. Strengths and Weaknesses of Testing  Strengths of standardized testing – Many tests—finding a good one in your area shouldn’t be hard – Identifies strengths and weaknesses from a variety of perspectives  Weaknesses of testing – Assumes that everyone is motivated and honest – Some techniques may be biased
  • 41. Classification and Diagnosis  In dx, we use either categories or dimensions  Keys to a classification system – Must be clearly defined – Groups or dimensions must exist (go together regularly) – Reliable—get same dx across observers – Valid—provide us with useful info, not overlap with other dx – Clinical utility
  • 42. Clinically Derived Systems  From a consensus of clinicians about which sx usually go together  DSM-American (ICD-10-other countries) – Grew out of Kraepelin’s initial classification in 1883 – 1952-DSM-I had 2 categories for children-Adjustment reaction and childhood schizophrenia – Adultomorphism – 1968—DSM-II—new section “Behavior Disorders of Child and Adolescence” – 1980—DSM-III—multiaxial  Now DSM-IV-TR  5 axes – I—Clinical disorders – II—Developmental disorders, personality disorders – III-General medical conditions – IV—Psychosocial stressors – V-Global assessment of functioning 0-100
  • 43. Strengths and Weaknesses of the DSM  Reliability—test-retests is fair for dx such as ADHD, CD, ODD--.51. to .64  Inter-rater is better for some than others—autism .85, ODD .55  Strengths—common diagnostic language – Wide acceptance and use – Multiaxial  Weaknesses—usually used for classification (not for understanding or tx) – Medical model – Reliability for kids and adolescents behind adults – Very complex – Labeling – Self-fulfilling prophecies
  • 44. Empirically-based Taxonomies  Collect info in a standardized manner from a large N of kids  Analyze data through statistical means  Explore associations between sx  Develop scales based on these behavioral items  CBCL by Thomas Achenbach
  • 45. Therapeutic Interventions  Settings for interventions – Inpatient settings – Residential tx facilities – Group homes/therapeutic foster care homes – Day hospitals – Outpt settings – School based mental health services
  • 46. Involvement in Treatment  Flisher et al 1997—at least 17% of kids and adolescents with severe psychopathology never receive tx  Goodman et al 1997—compared with those who do not receive services, those who do… – Experienced higher levels of psychopathology – Showed lower levels of competence – More likely to have comorbid disorders – More likely to be non-Hispanic Caucasians – Less likely to be prepubertal girls – Tended to have parents who were  More educated  More dissatisfied with their family functioning  Less involved in monitoring children’s behavior  More likely to have received tx themselves
  • 47. Who drops out?  High SES less likely to drop out  Attrition is lower when the whole family is involved  Most parent factors are not significant  Congruence between parental expectations and treatment recommendations is related to lower attrition  More coercive referral sources are more likely to drop out
  • 48. Does therapy work?  Consumer Reports surveys say pts are satisfied, but does it work?  Outcome studies—waitlist controls, no treatment controls, attention- placebo control, standard tx/routine care control  Casey and Berman 1985—first large scale meta-analysis – Tx outcome for those 12 and younger—64 studies—single ES for each study – Mean ES .71 -across studies the avg treated child functioned better after tx than 76% of control kids – Most tx (other than dynamic) were more effective than no tx – Behavioral somewhat better than non-behavioral – Worked whether play or no-play and parents and kids vs kids only – Tx is somewhat more effective for specific problems than for social adjustment problems – Tx effective across observers – Other meta-analyses have found very similar things
  • 49. The Next Step in Efficacy  Goal now is to establish empirically supported tx for specific problems  Two categories – Well-established tx – Probably efficacious tx (new tx that appears effective from 1 or 2 high-quality studies)  Problem—clinic vs. research tx—generally clinic is less effective
  • 50. Play Therapy  One technique to discuss across tx  Problem: young kids are less verbal, so play tx uses play to concretize communications  2 primary perspectives  Dynamic—kids can’t do verbal free association – Now dynamic people view play as a mode of expression  Client-Centered – Axline—basic principles of CCT— unconditional + regard, accurate empathy, genuiness  Non-directive  Not a great deal of support for play therapy as a stand-alone technique  Typical play therapy room contents: – Tactile materials – Drawing materials – Dolls and dollhouses – Hand puppets – Nerf balls – Blocks – Communication facilitators
  • 51. Psychodynamic Therapy  Very little support with children  Historical importance  Interpretation of unconscious conflicts
  • 52. Behavior Therapy  2 main types—child oriented and parent oriented  Generally based on research principles  Child-focused – Applied Behavior Analysis—focus on antecedents and consequences of behavior  Reinforcement, prompting, modeling, shaping, time out, punish. – Token economies – Systematic desensitization
  • 53. Parent-Oriented Behavior Therapy  Behavioral Parent Training-Barkley – Pay attention to and reward positive behavior – Ignore bad behavior – Allow natural consequences – Model appropriate behavior – Provide consistent and known consequences – Anticipate and plan for problem behavior – No idle threats – Limit the use of punishments  One 25 year follow up (Strain et al) showed positive results
  • 54. Evaluating Behavior Therapy  Achieves results in a short period of time—less distress, lower cost  Methods are clearly delineated; results easily measured  Works better with some problems than others—rarely used for complex personality disorders
  • 55. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy  Ellis—Rational Emotive Therapy – Sustained emotional reactions are caused by internal sentences that people repeat to themselves—irrational beliefs – Eliminate self-defeatingness by rational examination – Must decide together what to do  Beck—Cognitive therapy – Negative beliefs that people have about self, world and future cause disorders. – Both behavioral and cognitive.  Ellis—deductive—knows there are irrational beliefs  Beck—inductive—seeks negative beliefs  Social problem solving; skills training, assertion training—part of this  Efficacy – Less research on Ellis’ model—what is there says that it does not work as well as Beck’s approach.
  • 56. Family Systems Therapy  Family tx – All members all the time  Structural interventions – Change family’s organizational patterns
  • 57. Psychopharmacology  Medications are widely used, even if not widely studied in kids  Zito et al 2000—studied kids aged 2-4 between at three sites/three payees Stimulants 12.3, 8.9, 5.1 per 1000 Antidepressants—3.2, 1.6, .7  Antidepressants—limited support, not studied until recently – Fairly equivocal results – Only two are approved (Prozac and Zoloft) – Suicide concern  Anxiolytics—limited evidence, limited research  Antipsychotics—older kids with later onset of schizophrenia, higher intellectual functioning respond better  Psychostimulants—about 75 % of kids with ADHD respond well. Help attention and impulsivity but not social skills or academics  Drawbacks to meds—side effects; message that med use sends
  • 58. Prevention  20% of kids have disorders, even 10% would be a huge need if more than 5% of those in need got help  Primary—entire community  Secondary-children at risk  Tertiary—prevent recurrence  DARE  Head Start
  • 59. Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder  Symptoms – Inattention  Losing things  Disorganized  Can’t follow through on steps  Easily distracted – Hyperactivity  Talkative  Driven by a motor  Run in situations when it is inappropriate  Keys – Before age 7 (but some studies find little diff between before or after 7) – 6 mos duration (may be too brief for young kids) – 2 or more settings – Evidence of significant impairment  3 types—primarily inattentive, primarily hyperactive, combined
  • 60. Prevalence  Lots of controversy, lots of research  In 2009—25 % of articles in Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology were about ADHD  Some controversy about whether it is all one disorder or two  Prevalence—3-5 % of kids (2-10%) – 50-60% when clinical or special education samples are used – Kids tend to be referred for help between ages 7-9 – 50-80% will continue to have problems into adulthood – Boys outnumber girls by 2:1, some reports as high as 9:1
  • 61. Gender Differences  Compared with boys with ADHD, girls with ADHD tend to – have lower intellectual functioning – have lower levels of hyperactivity – fewer comorbid externalizing problems – inattentive types  No gender differences in – fine motor skills – social functioning – academic performance – impulsivity – family relationship variables like parental depression or parental education
  • 62. Inattention  May be able to pay attention in some situations  Not deficient in selective attention  Instead a basic deficit in the ability to sustain attention—CPT, reaction time  Deficit is context-dependent and task- dependent  All of this suggests, perhaps, a motivational deficit
  • 63. Hyperactivity and Impulsivity  Hyperactivity – Far less robust dimension than inattention – Some evidence that they are more active on a 24 hr basis (including sleep) – Greater restlessness – Differences most marked in younger kids—decrease. with age – Situation dependent  Impulsivity—cognitive vs. behavioral impulsivity – Act before they think – Complex tasks—accept 1st solution that comes to mind – Make very rapid responses, as well as irrelevant and inappropriate ones – Do not lack search strategies, but they are deficient
  • 64. IQ and Academic Achievement  7-15 pts below avg—not clear if IQ is low or poor test- taking skills  Do poorly in school – Repeat more grades, lower marks on standardized measures of reading, spelling, vocabulary, and math – Academic performance decreases with time – 40% receive some form of special education by adolescence – Cognitive etiology—core cognitive problems prevent development of problem-solving – Motivational factors—school failures lower self-esteem and undermine desire to achieve as child grows older
  • 65. ADHD and Memory  Intact as long as the list of stimuli is relatively short  Deteriorates as # of stimuli to be remembered increases  Appears that, instead of increasing in effort as task becomes more difficult, actually expend less effort and use less efficient memory strategies
  • 66. Higher Order Processes  Adequate on simple, but performance decreases as task complexity increases  Word knowledge—2 vs. 5 choices  When asked to scan an array, they skip around and focus on novel or striking stimuli instead of processing all relevant info  Performance increases with interest in task  When told about more effective strategies, don’t always use them  Poor metacognition
  • 67. Response to Reinforcement  Performance will increase if every correct response is reinforced  Withdrawal of expected rewards can interfere with performance, even on simple tasks  Performance deteriorates when reward is given after every 2nd correct response or at regular intervals  Exceptionally strong need for immediate gratification  Tend to invest more energy and interest in obtaining the reward than solving the problem (not task-oriented)
  • 68. Other Characteristics  Accident proneness—1/2 described this way – 15% have had 4 or more serious injuries – 3x more likely to have accidental poisoning  Distorted self-perceptions—positive illusory bias
  • 69. Comorbidity and Differential Diagnosis  Comorbidity—rule rather than exception for ADHD – Between 42 & 93% for ext, 13-51% for internalizing  Conduct disorder—20-50% – CD alone—more antisocial parents, more family hostility – ADHD alone—more frequently off-task in school and play – Kids with both have worst features of both  LD – 10-92%--Loose defs of LD. Rigorous defs -17-35 % – Inattention leads to learning probs and vice versa – Less task persistence in ADHD kids  Speech or language—30-60% have impairments – Use fewer pronouns and conjunctions – Also more formal speech problems  Differential diagnosis—bipolar, PTSD, FAS, lead poisoning
  • 70. Course of the Disorder  Preschool – 6 mos required of DSM may be too short, at least 1 yr is more predictive of future problems – Preschoolers –restless, driven by a motor, impulsive, incr. risk for accidents and poisoning, moody, demanding of attn., defiant, noncompliant – 40% of 4 yo have problems with attention severe enough to be noted by teachers or parents but, for most of these kids, problems are gone in 6 mos – Of 4 yo. with ADHD, only 48% will still have dx in middle childhood or adolescence – Those who develop it earlier have greater problems with cognitive functions, worse family functioning, increased comorbidity, increased likelihood of it lasting to adolescence
  • 71. Course of the Disorder  Middle childhood – 50% experience peer rejection – ADHD who aren’t comorbid are in the minority – ½ will have individual or family tx – 1/3 will receive some special education services – Parents note failure to accept responsibility, having to supervise self-help activities such as dressing and bathing, temper tantrums, immaturity
  • 72. Course of the Disorder  50-80% continue to show sx of ADHD  25% engage in antisocial behavior such as stealing or fire setting  50-70% repeat grades  8x as likely to be expelled or drop out of school
  • 73. Course of the Disorder  Adulthood – Longitudinal studies show continuing problems with ADHD, antisocial PD, substance abuse (31% vs 3% of controls) – More car accidents/tickets – Less job stability – Academic achievement suffers – No direct connection with criminality—only if comorbid with CD
  • 74. Etiology  No one theory that everyone accepts  Family-genetic risk factors – Twin studies—70-80% – Between 25-30% of first degree relatives of kids with ADHD also meet criteria  Neurobiological factors—abnormalities in frontal-striatal region – Limitations in self-control and behavioral inhibitions (Barkley)  Family factors— – Negative controlling mother-child interactions begin when child is as young as 2 or 3 – Mothers report incr. stress, incr. social isolation, incr. distress – Interactions improve on both sides when child is given Ritalin or when Valium is given to mother – Hoover & Milich—gave kids placebo—mothers told it was sugar reported increased hyperactivity, were more critical  Things that don’t cause ADHD—diet, food additives, sugar
  • 75. Treatment of ADHD  No known cure  Medication—1937 math pills – Effectiveness rates range from 50-95% (about 70%) – 20-30% show no effects or adverse effects – When treated—less impulsive, more planful, fewer task-irrelevant behaviors, more goal-directed, more coordinated—makes beh more appropriate – Academic achievement and social skills—not improved—never learned in the first place – Can create kids who credit success to medication and failure to selves – Other problems—can be addictive, can make kids jumpy or zombie-like, bland mood  Overuse? About 3% of all school age kids – 90% of scripts for methylphenidate are in US—at least 5x higher than other places – Girls and adolescents are less likely to receive stimulants – 90% of visits to physician with complaints of hyperactivity result in script  At least 50% of kids dx’d with ADHD are not treated in a way consistent with recommendations of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
  • 76. Treatment of ADHD  Behavioral Parent Training  Behavioral Interventions in the classroom – Both are empirically supported – Basically involve education into observing behavior, reinforcing + behavior, token economies, appropriate discipline, empowering parents to work with schools, time out – Works best for kids 2-11  Intensive summer programs  Combination of behavioral methods and medications works best  Other interventions – Cognitive-behavioral interventions—may help with problem solving – Social skills training – Diet—not effective for majority of kids – Funny glasses – Sensory integration training – Biofeedback?