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Developmental psychopathology - the past

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Title: Developmental psychopathology - the past


1
Developmental psychopathology - the past
  • 1654 The Massachusetts Stubborn Child Act -
    father could petition a magistrate to put a
    stubborn child to death
  • Rie (1971) noted that no concept of disordered
    behavior in children could emerge so long as
    possession by the devil excluded other notions of
    causality
  • most research has tested linear models to produce
    still photographs of moving targets

2
Developmental psychopathology - classification
  • Why classify mental disorders?
  • human beings are natural categorisers - a form of
    communication
  • the economic imperative - categorisation is a
    practical necessity to distinguish those in
    clinical need from those without clinical need
    (Sonuga-Barke, 1998)
  • the knowledge imperative - classification lends
    itself to empirical study and has potential for
    understanding, change and refinement

3
Developmental psychopathology - classification
  • Why not classify?
  • tension between need to classify and desire to
    maintain optimism
  • tension between view that clear categories of
    disorder exist in reality versus a cut-off for
    impairment based on cultural norms and tolerances
  • risk of the delusion of understanding
  • concern that diagnostic labels may have negative
    impact ie. a secondary insult.

4
Developmental psychopathology - classification
  • System should have
  • reliability (across time, situation and
    informant)
  • internal consistency - symptoms hang together
  • specificity - what the disorder is and what it is
    not
  • external validity - aetiology, prognosis,
    treatment response
  • utility- assists clinical management

5
Developmental psychopathology
  • Disorders are
  • usually polygenic
  • influenced by development ie. interactions
    between the biology of brain maturation and the
    mutlidimensional nature of experience
  • influenced by environment and context
  • result from multiple, reciprocal interacting risk
    factors and causal events
  • have cognitive, affective, physiological and
    behavioural components

6
Developmental psychopathology - classification
  • Any system needs to account for
  • development, eg.
  • same symptom ? different or no disorder
  • different symptom ? same disorder
  • dynamic and interactive processes
  • environment and context

7
Developmental psychopathology -classification
8
Developmental psychopathology
3 years
restlessness overactivity
ADHD
14 years
reduced emotional/ behavioural self-regulation
9
Developmental psychopathology - classification
  • Dimensional (eg CBCL, BASC, Connors)
  • behaviours exist on continuous dimensions ie. all
    children have a score on each dimension
  • clinical significance expressed as standard
    deviations from the mean
  • Categorical (eg. DSM-1V, ICD10)
  • pathology occurs in discrete categories
  • presence of set number of specified symptoms
    establishes diagnosis

10
Classification-dimensional
  • use empirical multivariate statistical approaches
    to derive dimensions
  • dimensions are continuous
  • pathology differences in degree, rather than
    kind
  • require fewer dimensions than categories, can
    weight severity
  • cut points are arbitrary eg. time and culture
    bound,
  • caseness is a function of deviation from a
    normal score, rather than level of impairment

11
Externalising disorders
  • most common presentation to child mental health
    services
  • aggression
  • oppositionality
  • impulsivity
  • anti-social behaviours eg. lying, stealing
  • boys gt girls
  • parent/teacher reports reliable, self reports
    underestimate symptoms

12
Internalising disorders
  • next most common presentation
  • anxiety
  • social withdrawal
  • depression
  • somatisation
  • phobias
  • boys ? girls, girls ? in adolescence
  • need self report - parents/teachers underestimate
    symptoms

13
Dimensional systems
  • generate reasonable inter-rater agreement,
    (although internalising symptoms often
    under-recognised)
  • too broad to provide information about aetiology,
    treatment response, prognosis
  • often result in high estimates of caseness -
    Aust. community prevalence rates for total
    behaviour problems between 14-18 (Sawyer et al.
    2000 Zubrick et al. 1995
  • give insufficient weight to clinical impairment

14
Classification - categorical
  • pathology differs in kind, not just in degree
  • based on a medical model illness versus well
    being
  • classification is based on informed clinical
    consensus
  • provide reasonable prognostic information eg,
    ADHD improves, CD high risk of life-long
    pathology
  • less reliable about treatment response, no
    assumptions about aetiology
  • low inter-rater reliability
  • prevalence estimates lower than with dimensional
    systems eg, MDD 2-5 CD ADHD 2-6

15
Childhood disorders - DSM-1V
  • Axis 1 codes for disorders first diagnosed in
    childhood
  • learning
  • motor skills
  • communication
  • pervasive developmental disorders
  • ADHD
  • feeding and eating
  • tic
  • elimination
  • other eg. separation anxiety, selective mutism

16
DSM-1V
  • Use adult Axis 1 codes for
  • mood disorders
  • anxiety disorders
  • adjustment disorders
  • schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders
  • substance abuse-related disorders

17
DSM-1V
  • based on belief that reliability is enhanced if
    classify on signs and symptoms rather than
    interpretation and inference
  • but, symptoms still rated on cultural and
    temporal constructions of deviance eg often
  • in fact, little evidence that day to day
    diagnostic reliability is actually achieved (may
    be better with training/semi-structured interview
    schedules).
  • high levels of co-morbidity between, and
    heterogeneity within, disorders undermines the
    categorical approach Clark et al., 1995)

18
James (7 years)
  • History
  • eldest of three, intact family, normal
    development
  • Presenting symptoms (present 1 year)
  • aggression eg. hitting peers, fighting
  • stealing
  • oppositional at home
  • Diagnosis
  • conduct disorder

19
James
  • Symptoms short lived (previously an assertive,
    active little boy but not oppositional or
    aggressive) ie. no evidence of geteic
    predisposition or biological risk factors such as
    difficult temperament, low intelligence.
  • Symptoms context bound
  • father lost job 12 months previously
  • family move
  • father - anger outbursts, punitive
  • mother depressed/overwhelmed
  • James struggling with reading

20
James
  • differential diagnosis
  • reading disorder
  • reactive situational stress disorder

21
Developmental psychopathology
  • ?10 of children have a diagnosable disorder that
    causes some level of impairment
  • continuities and discontinuities but many
    children do not grow out of their disorder
  • disorder may be stable but symptom patterns
    change
  • attempt to classify limited by
  • multiple pathways ? single disorder
  • single pathway ? multiple disorders
  • many children are untreated
  • social changes may increase prevalence
  • risk and resilience factors are emerging

22
Developmental psychopathology - the future
  • active child, active environment
  • singular pathway and outcome models replaced by
    non-linear models capturing dynamic, interacting
    contextual, developmental and environmental
    influences
  • improved methodology and assessment tools eg.
    genetics, neuroimaging, observation tools.

23
Child assessment
  • children rarely self refer
  • development limits ability to provide information
    about self
  • referral bias/scapegoating
  • family system can be coded as a stressor (Axis
    1V), but not as patient
  • poor agreement across sources (better within
    sources eg. parents)

24
Child assessment
  • scientist practitioner model - evidence based
  • hypotheses formulated, tested and revised
  • systematic analysis of the presenting problem

25
Child assessment (Shapiro, 1997)
  • genes
  • pre perinatal
  • injury/illness
  • temperament, behaviour
  • self concept, emotions
  • phase/stage
  • transitions
  • family
  • peers
  • community
  • biological
  • psychological
  • developmental
  • social

26
Childhood disorders - assessment
  • Referral
  • History
  • Assessment
  • Formulation
  • Treatment/management

27
Child assessment
  • Referral
  • By whom?
  • characteristics of the referrer
  • children do not self refer
  • ethical implications
  • Why now?
  • contextual factors
  • intercurrent stresses

28
Child assessment
  • History
  • the story of the problem
  • developmental history
  • information from previous assessments
  • medical information
  • educational information

29
Child assessment
  • Collect information in multiple forms
  • structured interviews
  • standardised measures
  • play
  • drawing
  • analogue scales
  • direct observation across settings
  • collect information from multiple informants

30
Child assessment
  • Presenting problem
  • pre-disposing
  • within child eg genes/intelligence/temperament
  • family/contextual factors
  • precipitating
  • developmental transition
  • environmental stressor/change
  • perpetuating
  • entrenched problem/expectancies
  • discipline strategies eg. negative
    re-inforcement/communication patterns

31
Child assessment
  • Formulation
  • integrative and conceptual
  • multi-faceted
  • synthesis of predisposing, precipitating, and
    perpetuating factors
  • evidence based treatment/management plan

32
Child assessment
  • Treatment
  • education and understanding
  • environmental manipulations
  • specific therapies eg. BT, CBT, psychotherapy
  • parents (teachers) as co-therapists

33
Child assessment
  • Referral
  • Opthalmologist
  • Is Will as blind as he seems?
  • Family/social

diabetes
7
5
IP
34
Child assessment
  • History
  • no significant family history of physical, mental
    health or educational problems reported
  • Will - congenital nystagmus, otitis media
  • no symbolic, imaginative play, not interactive or
    explorative
  • explained as secondary to physical problems

35
Child assessment
  • History (cont)
  • kindergarten - resisted change, didnt understand
    turn taking, limited peer interaction ?- psych
    assessment, Average IQ, fastidious, but could
    accept re-direction
  • 6 years - progressing well academically, no
    friends, parents concerned about low empathy,
    oppositionality
  • Will - ? complaints of poor vision
  • Psych referral - ODD (not OCD, AS), parenting
    strategies

36
Child assessment
  • History (cont) 8 years
  • D of E assessment - WISC111
  • Average IQ, suggested ASD assessment
  • diagnosis of high functioning autism
  • vision deteriorating
  • Referral to RCH - 9 years
  • is his blindness functional?

37
Child assessment
  • Assessment - neuropsychological
  • pragmatic language deficits
  • poor use of non-verbal cues
  • but, inconsistent responses on visual tasks eg.
    Block Design SS 10
  • executive deficits, including classic
    dissociation between knowing and doing

38
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39
Child assessment
  • Assessment - emotional
  • interactive, but reduced flexibility, spontaneity
  • negative self-percept
  • aware of difference
  • unhappy, ? clinically depressed
  • striking disparity between teacher and mother
    report

40
Child assessment
  • Assessment - family
  • low parental enjoyment social ostracism
  • mother tense despairing father distancing
    himself
  • Will - conduit for family tension, the
    scapegoat
  • other children idealised
  • ? parental mental health - past/current

41
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44
Will
  • Formulation
  • ASD
  • Conversion disorder - with sensory deficit
  • Adjustment disorder with mixed anxiety and
    depressed mood
  • parent/ child attachment, family interaction
  • problems
  • Treatment
  • family therapy
  • individual therapy social skills training

45
Will
  • diagnosis shopping
  • discrepant information/formulation across sources
  • under recognition of secondary conditions
  • differential diagnosis

46
Will
  • Shift focus from assessment to therapeutic
    management
  • assessment/treatment of mood state/family
    dynamics
  • minimise focus on vision. Home and school to
    work on the assumption that Will can see.
    Modifications to the learning or physical
    environment only if explicitly requested by Will,
    provided with minimal attention and combined with
    positive attention for seeing
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