Title: Introduction to Children and Young Peoples Mental Health
1 - Introduction to Children and Young Peoples
Mental Health - National Inter-Agency Training Resource
- Day One
2Meanings
- In small groups discuss what is emotional health
and well-being/mental health? - Record your discussion on flipchart paper
3Framework for Promotion, Prevention and Care
(FPPC)
- a state of well being in which the individual
realises his or her own abilities, can cope with
the normal stresses of life, can work
productively and fruitfully, and is able to make
a contribution to his or her community
4Scottish Needs Assessment Report (SNAP)
- Mental health is both personal and socialit is
the capacity of each and all of us to feel, think
and act in ways that enhance our ability to enjoy
life and deal with the challenges we face. It is
a positive sense of emotional and spiritual
well-being that respects the importance of
culture, equity, social justice, interconnections
and personal dignity
5NHS Health Advisory Service
- A capacity to enter into, and sustain, mutually
satisfying and sustaining personal relationships - Continuing progression of psychological
development - An ability to play and to learn so that
attainments are appropriate for age and
intellectual level - A developing moral sense of right and wrong
- A degree of psychological distress and
maladaptive behaviour within normal limits for
the childs age and context
6Key message
- Local agencies and practitioners need to
-
- engage in discussion about their differences,
with a view to developing shared accounts of the
young persons needs.
77 Outcomes
- Safe
- Nurtured
- Healthy
- Achieving
- Active
- Respected Responsible
- Included
- Scottish ministers expect children and young
people in Scotland to be valued by ensuring that
they are
8FPPC Principles
- Promotion by all who come into contact with
children and young people - Needs led
- Rights of the child as a core value
- Mainstreamed in childrens services
- Coherent combination of promotion, prevention,
intervention and care - Intelligent Networks
9FPPC Contexts
- Early Years - universal
- School Years - universal
- Community Based Activity
- Additional and Specific Supports
- Specialist CAMHS
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11Child Development
- For each stage describe childrens
characteristics and tasks. - The stages are 0-2, 3-6, 7-12, 13-18, adult
- Write a strap line to sum up the stage.
12Early Brain Development
- We are born with most of the neurons we will
ever own (around 200 billion) - At birth the brain is 25 of its adult weight -
by the age of 2 this has increased to 75 and by
age 3 it is 90 of adult weight. - This growth is largely the result of the
formation and hard wiring of synaptic
connections - Babies brains are both experience expectant
and experience dependent
13Importance of positive brain development
- The way the child is stimulated shapes the
brains neurobiological structure. What happens
in the early years has a direct impact on the
childs capacity for living, learning and
relating as a social being.
14The Learning Years 5-10
- Synaptic pathways that are regularly used are
reinforced. This is the basis of learning.
Reinforcement leads to permanent neurological
pathways. - Neural connections needed for abstract reasoning
are developed - Motor skills are refined
15Adolescent Brain Development
- Brain development continues up to at least the
age of 20 - There is a significant remodelling of the brain
in adolescence, particularly the frontal lobes
and connections between these and the limbic
system - The frequency and intensity of experiences shapes
this remodelling as the brain adapts to the
environment in which it is functioning and
becomes more efficient
16Emotional Functioning in Adolescence
- There is a mismatch between emotional and
cognitive regulatory modes in adolescence - Brain structures mediating emotional experiences
change rapidly at the onset of puberty - Maturation of the frontal brain structures
underpinning cognitive control lag behind by
several years - Adolescents are left with powerful emotional
responses to social stimuli that they cannot
easily regulate, contextualise, create plans
about or inhibit
17Adolescent Psychological Development
- The developing adolescent brain regions affect
the ability to make the distinction between first
person and third person perspective - Perspective-taking capacity dip during puberty
- Adolescents are significantly poorer at
responding to third-person scenarios compared to
first-person scenarios
18Attachment Theory
- Attachment behaviour is defined as -
- The seeking of protection when anxious,which
is triggered by external threats or behaviours. - The person to whom a child is attached provides a
secure base, a place of safety, warmth and
comfort.
19Attachment Theory
- A securely attached child feels confident that
should they feel anxious, their parents will
respond. Such security is brought on by
interactions which are - Sensitive
- Regularly available and reliable
- Warm
- Responsive
- Consistent
20Attachment Styles
- Secure attachment
- Insecure avoidant attachment
- Insecure ambivalent/anxious attachment
- Disorganised attachment
21In Essence
- Attachment needs are activated during times of
perceived stress (discomfort, environmental,
danger, fatigue, illness) - The child must either have these attachment needs
met or find other ways to cope.
22Resilience
- Normal development under difficult circumstances
- Bouncebackability (Ian Dowie)
- Innate human capacity to cope with adversity
23Three types of resilient child
- Children who do not succumb to adversity in spite
of their high risk status - Children who develop coping strategies in
situations of chronic stress - Children who have suffered extreme trauma and who
recover and prosper - Masten, A et al (1990) Resilience and
development contributions from the study of
children who overcame adversity. Development and
Psychopathology, 2 425-44
24Resilience
- In the child
- gender
- secure attachment experience
- an outgoing temperament as an infant
- good communication skills, sociability
- planner, belief in control
- humour
- problem solving skills, positive attitude
- experience of success and achievement
- religious faith
- capacity to reflect
25Resilience
- In the family
- At least one good parent-child relationship
- Affection
- Clear, firm consistent discipline
- Support for education
- Supportive long term adult relations/absence of
severe discord
26Resilience
- In the community
- Wider supportive network
- Good housing
- High standard of living
- High morale school with positive policies for
behaviour, attitudes and anti-bullying - Valued social role, e.g. a job, volunteering,
etc. - Range of sport/leisure activities
27Resilience is developed by..
- Compensatory experiences
- Challenges
- Protection
- Ungar, M (2004) Nurturing Hidden Resilience in
Troubled Youth Toronto UTP - Change childs appraisal and cognitive processing
of events - Reduce exposure to risk
- Rutter,M (1987) Psychosocial resilience and
protective mechanisms American Journal of
Orthopsychiatry, 57,3 pp316-331
28Domains of Resilience
Secure base
Social competence
Positive values
Education
Talents interests
Friendships
29 - Introduction to Children and Young Peoples
Mental Health - National Inter-Agency Training Resource
- Day Two
30Mental health definitions
- Mental health
- An umbrella term embracing concepts of mental
well-being, mental health problems, mental
disorder and mental illness. - Mental well-being
- The positive capacities and qualities that enable
young people to deal with the ups and downs of
life. - Mental health problems
- Broad range of emotional and behavioural
difficulties that may cause concern to parents
and carers and/or distress to the young person.
Can be short or long term and will disrupt the
young persons life even though they may not be
diagnosable as a mental disorder.
31Mental health definitions
- Mental disorder
- Problems that meet ICD-10, an internationally
recognised classification system for mental and
behavioural disorders. Associated with
considerable distress and substantial
interference in young persons daily life - Mental illness
- Refers to the most severe types of mental
disorder
32General Prevalence
- Mental health problem in perhaps one child in
five (20) - Diagnosable disorder in around 10 of children
- Greater in the upper age group
- Level increasing over time (for some disorders)
- Differences across ethnic groups
- Differences between family types
- Variations with household income
33Incidence and Prevalence in Scotland
- 760,000 children in Scotland (2001 Census)
- 1 in 10 have a mental disorder (76,000)
- children with emotional/conduct disorders were
more than twice as likely as other children to
live with parents who had no educational
qualifications and were about three times as
likely to live in households in which neither
parent was working - children with emotional/conduct disorders were
more likely as other children to have a household
income of less than 200
34Risk factors mental health
- Risk factors in children
- Genetic influences
- Low IQ and learning disability
- Specific developmental delay
- Communication difficulty
- Difficult temperament
- Physical illness, especially if chronic and/or
neurological - Academic failure
- Low self-esteem.
- Risk factors in families
- Overt parental conflict
- Family breakdown
- Inconsistent or unclear discipline
35Risk factors mental health (continued)
- Hostile and rejecting relationships
- Failure to adapt to a childs changing needs
- Physical, sexual and/or emotional abuse
- Parental mental health problems or mental
disorder - Parental criminality, alcoholism or personality
disorder - Death and loss including loss of friendship.
- Risk factors in environments
- Poverty and deprivation
- Homelessness
- Disaster
- Discrimination and / or bullying
- Other significant life events.
36Classification of mental disorders
37Classification of mental disorders
38Traumatic stress
- When children and young people experience
persistent stress they are likely to produce
toxic amounts of cortisol which can have a
detrimental effect on - Brain function
- All major body systems
- Social functioning
39What prevents brain development?
- Prenatal exposure to drugs and alcohol
- Malnutrition
- Neglect lack of stimulation
- Poor attachments
- Physical and sexual abuse
- Parental ill-health
- Chronic stress
- US Department of Health and Human Services
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41Effects of overproduction of stress hormone on
child development
- These functions may be diminished or lost
- Ability to learn language and to speak
- Understanding feelings or having words to
describe them - Connection between how we feel and our sensory
experience - Empathy
- Control of impulse
- Regulation of mood
- Short term memory
- Enjoyment
42The 4 Ps
- Predisposing e.g. risk factors
- Precipitating e.g. current triggers
- Perpetuating e.g. long standing issues/lack of
services - Protective e.g. resilience factors
43Problems in Inter-professional working
- Expect others to act when theres been no
- previous relationship
- Danger of projecting own agency shortcomings onto
others - Professional stereotypes, fears and jealousies
- Budget protection strategies
- Different agency priorities and time frames
- Different languages
- Confidentiality can act as a barrier
- More comfortable not to change
44Consensus, competition and conflict
- How did that make you feel and why did it make
you feel that way? - What would you change about the task so that you
could work in partnership with others to achieve
your aims?
45Effective multi-agency working
- Clear structures
- Effective support for children and families
- Joint performance targets
- Time to get to know partners
- Flexibility
- Common strategies
- Pooling resources
- Sharing information
- Common goals
- Child and family centred objectives
- Effective evaluation of working together
- Consistency
- Avoidance of duplication and repetition
- Common understanding and language
- Transparency
- Equality