Child Psychological Disorders Vocabulary Flashcards

Conduct Problems

Overview

  • Conduct problems are disruptive behaviors exhibited by children and adolescents.
  • Understanding their etiology is critical for effective treatment.

Etiology

Genetic Predisposition
  • Conduct problems have a heritable component, with genetics accounting for 30-40% of the variance in disruptive behaviors.
  • Specific genes remain unidentified, but children may inherit:
    • Difficult temperament
    • Physiological under-arousal
Difficult Temperament
  • Affects various relationships and skills:
    • Parent-Child Relationship: Difficult temperament can interfere with bonding.
    • Coping Skills: Issues with self-regulation.
    • Social Problem-Solving: Hindered ability to navigate social situations.
Physiological Under-Arousal
  • Children may show:
    • Reduced sensitivity to punishment.
    • A decreased capacity to experience pleasure.

Interpersonal Factors

Hostile Parenting
  • Characteristics:
    • Models aggressive behavior rather than prosocial behavior.
    • Inconsistent discipline can lead to avoidance and escalation to abuse.
  • Treatment: Emphasizes parent training for better behavioral modeling.
Coercive Family Process (Patterson et al., 1992)
  • Dynamics:
    • Parent issues a command.
    • Child ignores the command.
    • Parent escalates the command.
    • Child reacts negatively, leading to withdrawal of command by the parent.
  • Treatment: Focuses on improving parenting strategies.
Parent Cognition
  • Important factors include:
    • Internal, stable attributions for the child's behavior can foster feelings of incompetence leading to hostility.
    • Low parental monitoring correlates with adolescent-onset conduct disorder (CD).
    • Insufficient supervision and lack of consequences for rule violations.
  • Treatment: Involves increased parental engagement and monitoring.

Intrapersonal Factors

Encoding Social Cues
  • Limited and superficial search for social cues leading to:
    • Inability to encode sufficient social information.
    • Tendency to focus excessively on negative cues.
Interpretation Bias
  • Hostile Attribution Bias:
    • Children misinterpret social cues as hostile, escalating conflict.
Response Generation
  • Searching for Responses:
    • Limited options considered for actions.
    • Often results in negative responses due to poor decision-making.
  • Enactment:
    • Responses often delivered clumsily and awkwardly.

Longitudinal Research Findings

  • Key outcomes associated with conduct problems include:
    • Increased likelihood of violent crimes, drug and property convictions.
    • Higher rates of antisocial personality disorder (ASPD).
    • Correlation with experiences of child maltreatment and partner violence.
    • Associated with academic challenges such as high school dropouts, and mental health issues including depression/anxiety leading to unemployment.

Problem-Solving Skills Training (PSST)

  • Attention: Teach children to focus on all relevant cues.
  • Response Consideration: Encourage generating multiple responses and considering their consequences.
  • Role Play: Use rehearsals and feedback to build competency in social interactions.
  • STOPLIGHT Metaphor: Promote stopping to think before reacting, improving decision-making.