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Counseling Children and Adolescents ECG 558

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Title: Counseling Children and Adolescents ECG 558 Author: Nancy Last modified by: nfox Created Date: 7/7/2005 2:28:20 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Counseling Children and Adolescents ECG 558


1
Counseling Children and AdolescentsECG 558
  • Chapter 10
  • Counseling At-Risk Children
  • and Adolescents

2
Introduction
  • Changing socioeconomic factors have changed
    family environments in recent years
  • Poverty, economic instability, marital
    transitions, social changes, new technologies
    violence have influenced children/adolescents
  • Challenges faced by todays youth are as great as
    ever before
  • Fewer adults function as role models support
    systems

3
Poverty as a Major Risk Factor
  • Poverty is related to poor physical health, low
    educational attainment, and psychological
    disorders
  • Four factors contribute to increased poverty
    among children decreased economic growth
    changes in employment structure cut in
    government benefits for children increase in
    single-parent families
  • Poverty experienced at younger age has greater
    negative effects than at older age
  • Poverty rates for ethnic minority children are
    higher than for Caucasian children
  • Effects of poverty are multifaceted (less access
    to services, more health problems, more family
    dysfunction)

4
Socializing Systems Family Context
  • Children are greatly influenced
  • Characteristics of healthy families open system,
    adaptive, flexible
  • Parental Divorce Family Blending
  • Domestic violence
  • Child sexual abuse
  • Parenting Behavior
  • Permissiveness vs. restrictiveness
  • Hostility vs.warmth
  • Anxious/emotional involvement vs calm detachment
    dimensions

5
Two Issues in the Family Context
  • Changing family structure
  • divorce rates are rising
  • blended families are a reality for many
    children
  • working parents place extra caretaking
    responsibilities on children
  • Dysfunctional families
  • dysfunction in families is stressful for all
    members and can cause disorders
  • family environments that put children at risk
    are
  • a. Violence in the home
  • b. Child Abuse
  • c. Neglect
  • d. Homicide
  • e. Sexual abuse

6
Socializing Systems Peer Context
  • Peer influence
  • Drug use
  • Peer group interventions
  • Cooperative learning groups
  • Drawback peers teach reinforce deviance
    behavior negative peer effects

7
Socializing Systems School Context
  • Healthy school environments consist of
  • Strong leadership
  • Collaboration
  • Sense of fairness and respect
  • Discipline
  • Community support
  • Academic curriculum

8
Socializing Systems
  • School Context
  • Community support is important
  • Constrained by deficient social capital
  • School structure, size philosophy influence
  • School Dropout
  • Low academic motivation, history of problems with
    authority, frequent absences, pregnancy/
    marriage, working, family conflict, drug abuse,
    minority status, 2 years behind
  • School Violence
  • Increased incidents
  • Fighting/intimidation
  • Weapons

9
The School Context
  • Strong correlations between school difficulties
    and the development of serious problems
  • Schools can reduce risk and promote positive
    adjustment for all students
  • Schools should promote positive peer interactions
  • School size, structure, and philosophy have
    influence on learning environment and at-risk
    students
  • Adolescence oftentimes brings on more school
    problems (for instance, truancy, reduced
    motivation)
  • Gender role socialization may contribute to
    problems for girls in schools
  • School dropout is higher for the students already
    at risk
  • Rising school violence

10
A Framework for Prevention and Intervention
  • Factors contributing to mental health problems in
    youth are diverse
  • Families, schools, communities, and society
    contribute to these problems and help maintain
    them
  • J. J. McWhirter et al. (2007) proposed a
    comprehensive prevention/intervention framework
    (At-risk, Approach, Context Continuums)

11
At-Risk ContinuumThe degree to which youth are
at risk for serious behaviors and problems
  • Minimal favorable demographics
  • Remote less favorable demographics
  • High negative demographics
  • Imminent Negative demographics yet have
    developed gateway behaviors
  • Highest engaged in serious problem behaviors,
    or depressed/suicidal

12
Approach ContinuumAppropriate types of
prevention/intervention for various levels of
risk
  • Universal appropriate for all ages, not just
    the at-risk children preventive
  • Selected aim at those who share some
    circumstances/experiences Ex Head start
  • Booster Sessions review/reinforce components of
    universal selected approaches
  • Indicated treatment approaches used w/kids at
    imminent risk for serious problem behaviors
  • Second-chance Programs used w/kids who have
    engaged in severe problem behaviors

13
Contexts ContinuumIncludes early involvement
(family,school,society/ community) in broad-based
prevention/intervention
  • Family context provide culturally appropriate
    family-strengthening opportunities promoting
    interaction/communication/health-care/ parent
    training/ family counseling/ special programs
  • School-based - early compensatory programs, after
    school care, generic programs infused in the
    curriculum, second chance, school-based
    programs,etc
  • Society/Community improved economic conditions,
    housing, childcare, job opportunities etc

14
DepressionIncidence and Characteristics
  • Adult depression differs from depression in
    childhood and adolescence
  • Dysthymia-chronic sense of dysphoria that is less
    intense than depression
  • Signs frequent physical complaints-headaches,
    stomaches, muscle aches, fatigue-, school absence
    or poor performance, running away, outburst of
    anger, irritability or crying, boredom, lack of
    interest, alcohol or substance abuse, heightened
    social sensitivity, difficulty in friendships,
    fear of death Also associated with anxiety,
    disruptive behaviors, substance-abuse, diabetes,
    increased suicide risk

15
Depressive Disorders
  • Incidence and Characteristics (cont)
  • Depression affects approximately 30 of
    adolescents
  • Depression affects approximately 2-5 of children
  • Females are twice as likely as males to express
    depression
  • Depression is not a developmental phase
  • Both the developmental process as well as the
    psychological, social, and biological components
    of depression need to be taken into consideration

16
DepressionTreatment
  • Take cultural factors into account
  • Counselors need to use developmentally
    appropriate interventions
  • Preventative, community-based programs that
    promote healthy families
  • School-based training/educational/topic specific
  • Cognitive-behavioral therapy is most effective
  • Antidepressant medications/ psycho social
    interventions
  • Combination of CBT medications

17
SuicideIncidence and Characteristics
  • Suicide is the third leading cause of death
    ages 10-24
  • Leading cause of the death of Gay and Lesbian
    adolescents
  • American Indians have the highest suicide rate
    among ethnic minority adolescents
  • Hispanic adolescents are more likely for suicide
    than European American or African American
  • Females are 3 times more likely than males to
    attempt males are 5 times more likely to
    complete suicide
  • Depression, difficult adjustments, emotional
    ambivalence, anger, ineffective communication,
    and stressful living conditions contribute to
    suicidal ideation
  • Loneliness, impulsivity, risk-taking, low
    self-esteem, faulty thinking patterns also
    associated with higher suicide risk

18
Suicide Assessment
  • Multifaceted approach necessary
  • Clinical interview - helpful in assessing risk
  • Risk factors include family history of suicide,
    previous suicide attempts, substance abuse,
    anxiety, hopelessness/ depression, current family
    problems, other current stressors
  • Self-report measures

19
SuicidePrevention/Intervention
  • Focus on underlying environmental and
    interpersonal characteristics associated with
    suicide(depression, lack of social support, poor
    problem-solving skills, hopelessness)
  • School setting is a good place for primary
    prevention
  • Offer family support programs (Family Resource
    Center)
  • Early intervention should minimize frequency and
    severity of suicidal ideation
  • Suicide screenings
  • Establishment of interdisciplinary crisis teams
    (teachers, school counselors, parents, nurses,
    community)
  • McWhirter et al. (2007) use of four-step model
    for managing a suicide crisis
  • 1. assess lethality
  • 2. written agreement emergency phone
  • 3. monitor and track clients behavior for 1-3
    days
  • 4. inform the childs parents

20
Substance AbuseIncidence and Characteristics
  • Pathological use of a substance that causes
    significant impairment in functioning
  • Statistics - p. 349 in text
  • Drugs most used by adolescents in US Alcohol,
    Tobacco, Marijuana

21
Substance AbuseRisk Factors
  • Individual Factors- aggressiveness, neg moods,
    withdrawal, mental health issues, withdrawal,
    impulsivity, conduct disorders, ADHD, depression,
    learning disorders
  • Peer Factorsassociation w/drug abusers
  • Family Factors Older sibling abuses, high
    family conflict, poor parenting practices,
  • School Factors academic failure, subsequent
    drop-out, inappropriate classroom behavior,
    aggression toward others, etc
  • Community Factors poverty, lax drug laws/abuse,
    high availability of drugs

22
Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment
  • Preventive interventions typically occur in
    school settings and may be universal, selected or
    indicated interventions
  • Schools mostly use information-based preventive
    interventions
  • Treatment occurs most often outside the school
    setting

23
Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment
  • Outside Interventions
  • Treatment sites
  • Outpatient
  • Day treatment
  • Inpatient Residential
  • Types of treatment
  • 12-step program
  • Cognitive behavioral-based interventions
  • Family-based interventions
  • Therapeutic communities

24
Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment
  • School-Based Interventions
  • Student Assistance Programs (SAP)
  • Only available in some school sites
  • Students are aware that substance abuse
    disclosure can lead to negative consequences
    rather than support (Zero tolerance policies)
  • Motivational Interviewing
  • Work with Students resistance rather than
    against it
  • Listen for challenges the student is currently
    facing (school disciplinary consequences,
    problems at home,
  • Use skills of reflection to communicate
    understanding

25
Summary
  • Counseling process with children and adolescents
    in crisis is complex
  • Need for comprehensive interventions
  • Knowledge of community and school programs and
    resources
  • Advocacy for broader social and policy change
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