Title: university of jos low emotional intelligence, drug abuse and
1UNIVERSITY OF JOS
- LOW EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE, DRUG ABUSE
- AND CHILD MALTREATMENT
- IMPLICATIONS FOR PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL WORK
SERVICES. -
INAUGURAL LECTURE BY GRAY GOZIEM
EJIKEME Dip. SW., B.Sc., (Lagos), PGDE, M.Sc.,
MSSW, Ph.D., Cert. in Drugs (N.J) VRS
(MI) Professor of Clinical Psychology Social
Work Department of Sociology Faculty of Social
Sciences University of Jos, Jos, Nigeria
UNIJOS INAUGURAL LECTURE SERIES 40 MARCH 5,
2010
2LOW EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE, DRUG ABUSE AND CHILD
MALTREATMENTIMPLICATIONS FOR PSYCHOLOGICAL AND
SOCIAL WORK SERVICES
- GRAY GOZIEM EJIKEME
- Dip. SW., B.Sc.,(Lagos), PGDE, M.Sc., MSSW,
Ph.D.,Cert. in Drugs (N.J) VRS (MI) - Professor of Clinical Psychology Social Work
- Department of Sociology
- Faculty of Social Sciences
- University of Jos, Jos, Nigeria
- E-Mail ejikemegg_at_yahoo.com
-
- THE UNIVERSITY OF JOS INAUGURAL LECTURE SERIES
- This 40 th Inaugural Lecture was delivered under
the - Chairmanship of
-
-
3 The Vice-Chancellor Professor Sonny Gwanle
Tyoden B.Sc. (Ibadan), M.A., Ph.D
(Lancaster) Published By Information and
Publications Division University of Jos, Jos.
Nigeria March 5, 2010 Printed at Jos
University Press Ltd
4 PROFESSOR GRAY GOZIEM EJIKEME Dip. SW., B.Sc.,
(Lagos), PGDE, M.Sc., MSSW, Ph.D.,Cert. in Drugs
(N.J) VRS (MI) Professor of Clinical Psychology
Social Work Department of Sociology Faculty of
Social Sciences University of Jos, Jos,
Nigeria E-Mail ejikemegg_at_yahoo.com
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9LOW EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE, DRUG ABUSE AND CHILD
MALTREATMENTIMPLICATIONS FOR PSYCHOLOGICAL AND
SOCIAL WORK SERVICES.
Introduction Mr. Vice-Chancellor, the Deputy
Vice-Chancellors (Academic and Administration)
and other Principal Officers, Deans and
Directors, Heads of Departments, Members of the
University Community, My Professional Colleagues
in the Practice of Psychology and Social Work,
Distinguished Guests and Friends of the
University, Gentlemen of the Press, Great
Josites, Ladies and Gentlemen, I humbly stand
before you to deliver my inaugural lecture
entitled Low Emotional Intelligence, Drug Abuse
and Child Maltreatment Implications for
Psychological and Social Work Services. To God
be the glory for making this memorable day and
giving us the grace to rejoice today and always.
I also give God glory and honour for the
opportunity to speak as an inaugural lecturer
while you listen.
10Low emotional intelligence, drug (substance)
abuse and child maltreatment are urgent health
and social problems which have implications for
the mental health of individuals, families,
communities and the society in which all of these
exist. Each of these is capable of separate
existence in an individual and they can also
coexist in a person at the same time. Ejikeme
(2000, 2002) examined the nature and scope of
co-morbidity, co-occurrence or co-existence of
drug abuse, mental distress, emotional abuse,
child maltreatment and related mental health
problems in Nigeria and also in Michigan. A
literature-based, desk study was carried out by
the inaugural lecturer, using (a) the rich
computing resources of the University of Michigan
School of Social Work, (b) academic contacts with
some United Nations Development Program
Leadership Development Program (LDP) resource
persons in some Nigerian universities, and (c)
scholarly exchanges of ideas and experiences with
some Psychology and Social Work faculty members
who are experts in the areas of emotional
intelligence, drug abuse and child maltreatment
for the purpose of increasing the existing
knowledge of the nature and scope of these
problems, their relationships, demonstrating the
need to address the problems by educating people
on EI especially in an era of rapid social change
and global financial crisis known as global
economic meltdown characterized by increasing
waves of poverty, inflation, unemployment, and
social deprivation and exclusion in Nigeria. Many
individuals, families, communities, particularly
people with deficits in emotion regulation and
low frustration tolerance who are unable to cope
with the rapid rate of change tend to be
dislocated and devastated as they encounter
increasing doses of stress. People who are unable
to cope with environmental stressors are at risk
for psychological disorders and social problems
and so, need the services of psychologists,
social workers and other mental health
professionals. The key terms in this inaugural
lecture- emotional intelligence, drug abuse and
child maltreatment are briefly conceptualized
before their co-morbidity, interconnections or
relationships, role in mental health professional
management are explored. The problems,
challenges, major concerns, opportunities and
prospects of psychological and social work
services in the global economic down-turn are
highlighted in the lecture.
11LOW EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE DRUG ABUSE AND CHILD
MALTREATMENT POWER POINT PRESENTATION
- INTRODUCTION
- Low emotional intelligence, drug (substance)
abuse and child maltreatment are urgent health
and social problems - The need to address them especially during the
global economic downturn - An era when many militants and perpetrators of
crises engage in religious extremism, acid
attack/bath, destruction of lives and property,
burning of human beings and houses. - A persons level of emotional intelligence is low
if he or she has deficits in emotion regulation
and lacks self-control in relating to self and
other people. Such a person needs the services of
psychologists, social workers, and other helping
professionals. - People with emotion regulation deficit (low level
of emotional intelligence) are highly at risk for
psychological disorders and so need the services
of psychologists and social workers.
12DEFINING CONCEPTS
- Emotion
- The centrality of emotion as an aspect of
attitude. - Emotion plays a prominent role in our lives. The
happiness people feel at graduation
ceremonieswhen promotedwhen a new baby arrives.
The pain experienced when your research
supervisor fails you. -
13- HOW PEOPLE IN ACADEMICS HANDLE EMOTIONS IN CRISES
SITUATIONS - Flare up of tension between striking
University-based labour Unions - Violent feelings and the need for psychotherapy
and social casework on campus -
- EMOTIONAL INTELLIGENCE (EI) AND INTELLIGENCE
QUOTIENT (1Q) - How emotional intelligence can matter more than
1Q - High 1Q does not guarantee success in life or
that a genius will be unruffled by stress - Being found worthy in character reflects high EQ
-
- EMOTION REGULATION OR MODULATION
- Effectiveness in emotion regulation as a central
goal in psychology and social work. - Self control
- It is one of the competencies of Emotional
Intelligence - Low self-control is a psychopathological problem
- Self monitors can be high or low.
- Scholars with low self-monitors and highly
subjective self-concept tend to claim to have the
monopoly of ideas. - Inaccurate self-concept and drug use.
14- ANXIETY AND MOOD DISORDERS
- Both negative and positive emotions impact on
cognition and behaviour - Anxiety and anger are at the root of substance
abuse, child abuse and mayhem. - Types of anxiety
- Rumours cause anxiety. HIV anxiety disturbs.
Anxiety that one will develop liver cirrhosis due
to pathological drinking. - Displacement of anger e.g., adults unleash anger
on children. - STRESS
- It is an unpleasant emotional reaction due to the
perception of an event to be threatening, scary
and disturbing - The perception of mayhem, confusion and fear,
usually caused by violent behaviour of hoodlums,
terrorists, kidnappers or some sudden traumatic
event or crisis can lead to stress. - Crisis situation, a time of great danger,
confusion, uncertainty, tension, difficulty, when
problems must be solved, urgent decisions must be
made to prevent complete breakdown and
psychological/social disorder
15- EFFECTS OF STRESS
- Reduced impulse control- associated with low EI.
Pathological drug use can cause it. - Child abuse and drug abuse especially as means
of dealing with posttraumatic stress disorder - Psychological and medical disorders
- TYPES OF STRESS
- Frustration-when we are provoked, displaced
aggression becomes a common response. - Conflict
- Change, e.g., frequent changes in lecture /exam
time-table - Pressure
-
- DRUG USE
- Definition of a drug
-
- DRUG ABUSE
- Types of drugs
-
- DRUG AND EMOTIONAL REACTIONS
- Personality characteristics and emotional
reactions
16- CHILD MALTREATMENT
- Harm inflicted on a child by an adult
- Types of child maltreatment physical, emotional
or psychological, child neglect and child sexual
abuse -
- LITERATURE REVIEW
- The concept of co-morbidity using DSM-V-TR 2000
- Severe mental illness with mild drug use problem
- Severe drug problem with mild mental illness
- Implications of co-morbidity for treatment by
psychologists and social workers. - The need for team work approach to treatment
- Substance abuse disorder can coexist with various
types of child maltreatment. - Substance abuse coexists with emotional abuse
-
- CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIAL WORK
- Opportunities and Prospects
-
- THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE
- Social Disorganisation theory
- Inability of a neighbourhood to exercise social
control
17- DRUG AVAILABILITY
- Drug availability and use and mental health
status - Relatively cheaper but more potent chemical
substances - Alcohol /goskolo outlets and high risk
neighbourhood - The perception of goats as human beings
- Perception of mother as wife under drug influence
- ROUTINE ACTIVITIES THEORY
- The attractiveness of alcohol outlets
- The power of the situation- the behaviour, the
person and situation or environment - The individuals definition of the situation
- PARENTING AND JUVENILE DELINQUENCY
- Ineffective parenting and low self-control
- Low self-emotion control and misbehaviour
- Indicators of ineffective parenting
- Robert K. Mertons theory of Deviance-conformists,
rebels, retreatists, innovators and ritualists
18- FINDINGS FROM LITERATURE SEARCH
- Emotions, Drug attitudes and Behaviour
- Behaviours including child abuse and neglect are
influenced by emotions. - Attitude towards a drug or a child is enduring
- The emotion or sensation a drug stimulates is
momentary. -
- EMOTIONS AND DRUG ABUSE BEHAVIOUR
- Dialectical relationship between beliefs and
emotions - Beliefs influence drug use behaviour
- Attitude-Behaviour Discrepancy
- Theory of cognitive dissonance
-
- EMOTIONS AND BEHAVIOURAL TENDENCIES
- Emotions shape beliefs.
- Intensions shaped by emotional tendencies.
Disliking your child can lead to child
abandonment. -
19- EMOTIONS AND CHILD MALTREATMENT
- Level of EI influences how parents and other
adults relate to childrens needs and problems - Modifying parental guidance
- Blaming your spouse
- Seeking professional help
- Resignation, learned helplessness.
- The belief that juvenile delinquency is caused by
evil machination by the wicked and depression - Depression and self-medication
- Low self-control and maladaptive behaviour-child
battering and drug abuse - Low emotional intelligence, drug abuse and child
maltreatment are linked
20- CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGISTS
- Their roles assessment, diagnosis, treatment,
prevention, and rehabilitation of cases of
emotion dysregulation, drug abuse and child
maltreatment. - Construction, development, standardization,
administration of psychological tests.
Interpretation of test scores and reporting test
outcome. Reconciliation, reconstruction and
rehabilitation of traumatised/troubled minds
after crisis. PTSD -
- CLINICAL SOCIAL WORKERS
- Their roles as members of the mental health team
in hospitals. - Their specialized training enables them serve as
consultants to other team - members and also undertake home visits.
- They use the methods of social work
- THE SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
INTERFACE - Social psychology concepts that relate to
clinical psychology. Their areas of overlap - Thinking styles and stress. Our self-concepts,
what we think about other people can lead to mood
disorders - Difficulties in social interaction and
psychological disorders can lead to drug abuse
and child maltreatment - How to change maladaptive or deviant attitudes
such as attitudes to drugs, negative attitudes
towards children
21- BEHAVIOURAL APPROACH TO EMOTIONAL DISTURBANCE,
DRUG ABUSE AND CHILD MALTREATMENT - Unlike the Freudian approach, how to eliminate
maladaptive behavoiur is the immediate focus - Observable behaviours such as yelling, flare-ups,
shouting, lashing or striking out, deviant
drinking and child abuse are indicative of lack
of impulse control, low emotional intelligence
and deficits in emotion regulation. These overt
forms of behaviour can be changed by applying
learning principles of behaviour therapy - Classical conditioning
- Operant conditioning
- Observational learning
- The techniques of behaviour therapy
- PSYCHOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL WORK SERVICES
- Systematic desensitizsation
- Aversive therapy
- Token Economy
- Social casework, Group work and Community
Development/ Organization
22- STRESS MANAGEMENT
- Synopsis of Psychological and Social Work
Services for People in Stressful and Abusive
Situations - Helping individuals, families and communities to
be sensitive to cues of anger - Educating people on how to have empowering
interpretations of stressful events, reversing
negative thought patterns and relaxation training
technique of behaviourists - Using relaxation training technique to explaining
how tense muscles can be relaxed by taking some
time out - Encouraging people to engage in self-disclosure-
It entails high emotional intelligence - Finding out if a client is involved in paying
elective attention on the problem or emotion? - The level of confidence that one is in control,
level of assertiveness to be determined by the
psychologist or social worker. - Social workers are to ensure the availability and
Accessibility of Social Support Network,
including - Provision of social environment, interaction with
caring people, confidants, close associates,
professionals - Provision of materials and economic conditions,
money, gifts - Provision of information, health information
- Networking, linking with help sources
- Provision of guidance and counseling for problem
solution - Check the pathological use of Defense
mechanisms-unconscious reactions protecting one
from unpleasant situations, scary thoughts,
disturbing emotions, and memories that can lead
to psychological breakdown-A lecturer that has
not been promoted can deceive himself by saying
that his employers do not like his face.
23- EFFECTS OF EDUCATION ON PARENTING
- Some parenting styles are exemplary some parents
lead by example, others do not - Children tend to copy adult examples
- Clinical psychologists and social workers can
assist parents with co-occurring disorders. - Drug-dependent parents and those that use
children to buy and sell drugs are not good role
models - A parent who is a terrorist in the family has low
EI - Parents who frequently engage in spousal abuse
and live like cats and dogs need psychotherapy
and social casework. - Social workers educate on parenting skills
24- SOCIAL WORKERS NEED TO BE EDUCATED ON EI
- Controlled emotional involvement
- Empathy and not sympathy
- A helping professional should be friendly,
humble, supportive, caring, smiling and not
arrogant and intimidating - Acceptance of client regardless of his or her
ethnic origin, religion or social class. - The use of non-judgmental attitude
- ATTITUDE CHANGE FOR HIGH EI AND NATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT - If we can change attitudes of perpetrators of
crises, we can change their society - If we can change drug attitudes, we can change
some maladaptive behaviour including the
expression of poor EI, drug or child abuse - Our behaviour towards those we like or dislike
- High EI enhances tolerance of other people
- Attitudes can be changed through persuasive
communication and action
25- Attitude change and Transformational Leadership
- Changing attitudes for national development
entails transformational leadership. - Leadership potential resides in everyone
- The answer to our problems- low EI, drug abuse,
child maltreatment, sectarian crisis is in us - Self-motivated attitude change is possible and
change should start with the individual. Who you
are is important. - The individual has to be transformed in terms of
his or her thought, emotions and behaviour to be
effective in transforming others. - It entails thinking outside the box and
overcoming the box problem in thinking, feeling
and acting. What is it I am doing or not doing
that is responsible for my low emotional
intelligence, drug use behaviour, maltreatment of
children and involvement in ethnic crisis or any
other form of criminal violence? It demands the
use of IQ and EI - Taking responsibility for any of these problems
is indicative of the competencies of emotional
intelligence- self-awareness, social awareness,
self-control, and relationship management. - Breakdowns are to be converted to breakthroughs
and should not lead to emotional crisis and child
battering or displacement of aggression. - Commitment to positive change
26- ATTITUDE CHANGE AND SOCIAL STRUCTURAL
TRANSFORMATION - Attitude change is necessary but not sufficient
- Social /emotional support reduces stress.
- While social/emotional support can prevent
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), social
support alone may not guarantee that there would
be no re-occurrence of bad moods, terrorism,
militancy, kidnapping or civil crisis. - There is the need for equitable provision of
social welfare services - SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
- Current literature used to discuss low EI, drug
(substance) abuse child maltreatment as urgent
health and social problems - The need to address these problems by educating
Nigerians on EI - Especially in an era of high waves of militant or
terrorist attacks, kidnapping, ethnic and
religious violence, political crisis, child
abuse, other acts of criminal violence associated
with poor EI and substance abuse. - These problems can be changed through attitude
change - Psychological and Social Work services can
contribute to the amelioration of the health,
psychological and social problems identified in
this guest lecture
27- Acknowledgements
-
- Mr. Vice-Chancellor, sir, at this point in my
lecture, I wish to thank all those that have been
caring, supportive and helpful in relating to me
in my career in very significant ways up to date
including those that are unable to attend the
lecture. I will always give God the first place
in my life without him I can do nothing but with
God all things are possible in our lives. With a
grateful heart I give thanks, glory and honour to
God for giving me the grace of breath, and making
me who I am especially in relation to Christ
Jesus and my academics. I am grateful to
Professor Sonni Gwanle Tyoden (Vice- Chancellor
of the University of Jos), the other principal
officers of the University of Jos, my
professional colleagues, members of staff of this
great institution, Great Josites, friends of the
University, my family members (Theresa Uchechi,
Maureen Ugochi, Rosemary Nkiruka and Samuel
Ikechi), Gentlemen of the Press, ladies and
gentlemen. -
-
-
28THANK YOU FOR LISTENING
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