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Adolescent developmental trajectories

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Adolescent developmental trajectories Dr Julie Alderson Paediatric Clinical Psychologist BCH What is adolescence for? What is the business of adolescence? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adolescent developmental trajectories


1
Adolescent developmental trajectories
  • Dr Julie Alderson
  • Paediatric Clinical Psychologist BCH

2
Aims
  • Revision what adolescent development is
  • Recent advances adolescent thinking
  • Position the adolescent patient within family
    and healthcare systems
  • Prompt thinking how cancer treatment can
    impact on adolescent development

3
Adolescent to adult
4
Theorists
  • Freud - psychosexual development, adolescence as
    a recapitulation of the development of sexual
    awareness in infancy.
  • Piaget - cognitive development, seeing the
    development of abstract thinking abilities as
    making possible the transition to independent
    adult functioning.
  • Erikson - development of personal identity

5
Biopsychosocial
  • Adolescence involves biological (puberty, sexual
    development brain) , psychological and social
    changes.

6
To Do
  • Challenge authority
  • Seek spiritual paths
  • Take risks
  • Experiment with drugs, alcohol and sex
  • Change educational environment
  • Challenge moral and social structure of society
  • Develop relationships
  • Demand rights
  • Understand sexuality
  • Renegotiate rules at home
  • Take responsibility for self and others
  • Get job

7
Nutshell
  • Grow up
  • Find self
  • Get a sexuality that fits

8
The problem/beauty of adolescence
  • the Piagetian concept of "formal operations" in
    thinking style not established.
  • egocentric and feel invulnerable to harm.
  • depend more on intuition than rational thinking.

9
You said my risk of developing skin cancer is
greater than other peoples
  • Concrete
  • Well, Ive had holidays in Spain for the 5 years
    before coming to this clinic and Ive come to no
    harm. My skin copes well with sun.
  • Abstract
  • Ive seen no problems yet but I may have already
    done some damage and increased my risk further.
    Id better be extra careful in future just in
    case.

10
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12
Neurological development
  • Adolescents are not adults.
  • They are on their way to becoming adults.

13
Early to mid 20s
  • The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is one of the last
    areas of the brain to mature
  • Executive functions are
  • not reliably in full effect
  • Make complex judgments
  • Weigh closely competing alternatives
  • Control impulses
  • Take the long view.

14
  • Interpretation of body states (Baird Bennett,
    2006)
  • Visuospacial working memory (Kilgore et al, 2002)
  • Greater activation of PFC in adults than
    adolescents on stop task (Rubia et al, 2000)
  • Intention (Blakemore et al, 2007)
  • Interpretation of emotional stimuli (Baird et
    al,1999 Kilgore et al, 2007 Thomas et al, 2007)

15
Interpretation of emotional stimuli
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20
Response to fear face
  • Adults
  • correctly identified the expression as fear
  • relied on the frontal cortex, which governs
    reason and planning

21
Response to fear face
  • Adults
  • Adolescents
  • correctly identified the expression as fear
  • relied on the frontal cortex, which governs
    reason and planning
  • shocked, surprised, angry
  • mostly used the amygdala, a region that guides
    "gut" reactions

22
Implications of
  • Interpretation of body states (Baird Bennett,
    2006)
  • Visuospacial working memory (Kilgore et al, 2002)
  • Greater activation of PFC in adults than
    adolescents on stop task (Rubia et al, 2000)
  • Intention (Blakemore et al, 2007)
  • Interpretation of emotional stimuli (Baird et
    al,1999 Kilgore et al, 2007 Thomas et al, 2007)

23
Implications
  • PFC matures more slowly than other brain
    structures
  • Leads to impulsivity, gut reactions risk-taking
  • Impacts on decision making understanding
    others communication
  • Knock on effects on emotional expression

24
Knock on effects on emotional expression
  • Dad says
  • Its got so that Im afraid to remind him to do
    his physio. Whenever I say to him its time to do
    it he looks at me with sheer vitriol like he
    could kill me!

25
Knock on effects on emotional expression
  • Dad says
  • Son says
  • Its got so that Im afraid to remind him to do
    his physio. Whenever I say to him its time to do
    it he looks at me with sheer vitriol like he
    could kill me!
  • Hes always wound-up and he takes it out on me.
    Hes always on at me about what I should do next.
    I just look at him and think looser.

26
Add cancer
  • a ball in uniform circular motion subjected to a
    centrifugal force and accelerates away from the
    centre.
  • a ball in uniform circular motion held to its
    path by a string tied to a post stuck in the
    ground. the ball is subjected to a centripetal
    force by the string.

27
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28
Add cancer
  • a ball in uniform circular motion subjected to a
    centrifugal force and accelerates away from the
    centre.
  • a ball in uniform circular motion held to its
    path by a string tied to a post stuck in the
    ground. the ball is subjected to a centripetal
    force by the string.

29
Not problem thinking
  • Not deficient, but fully developed for
    adolescence
  • ie, to deal with the tremendous transitions
    that humans face at this stage of life.
  • (National Institute of Health 2006)

30
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