Title: Adolescent Mental Health: Population-based Disaster Prevention
1Adolescent Mental Health Population-based
Disaster Prevention
- Gwendolyn J. Adam, Ph.D., L.C.S.W.
- Assistant Professor - Department of Pediatrics
- Section of Adolescent Medicine and Sports
Medicine - MCHB-funded Leadership Education in Adolescent
Health (LEAH) Program - Baylor College of Medicine
2Goals Objectives
- Goal Understand critical issues in adolescent
mental health as public health opportunities for
population-based disaster prevention. - Objectives
- Utilize key data indicators of adolescent mental
health to motivate strategic action - Identify conceptual and practical barriers to
addressing adolescent mental health needs - Develop strategies for improving public health
cultivation of adolescent mental health
3Adolescent Mental Health
- Using Key Data Indicators to Motivate Strategic
Action - Why We Need a Bracelet
4Key Data Indicators Demonstrate that Mental
Health Issues
- are prevalent among U.S. adolescents
- 1 in 10 children / adolescents suffers from
mental illness severe enough to result in
significant functional impairment - It is
estimated that 20 of children / adolescents have
a diagnosable mental disorder - (in 2004) 3.5 million youth (14) ages 12-17 have
experienced at least one major depressive episode
in their lifetime - lead to lethal thoughts and acts
- suicide - 3rd leading cause of death for
adolescents - 900,000 youths (3.6) made a plan to kill
themselves during worst or most recent Major
Depressive Episode - 712,000 youths (2.9) tried to kill themselves
during such an episode - impact other behavioral health risks e.g. drug
and alcohol use - have family system implications - parent mental
health affects adolescent health risk behavior - are not adequately addressed for adolescents -
less than half of depressed adolescents receive
treatment when they need it -
5Key Data Indicators Demonstrate that Mental
Health Issues
- impact other behavioral health risks e.g. drug
and alcohol use - have family system implications - parent mental
health affects adolescent health risk behavior - are not adequately addressed for adolescents -
less than half of depressed adolescents receive
treatment when they need it - escalated for adolescents - between 1960 and 2000
the suicide rate among adolescents increased 128
as compared to an increase of 2 in the general
population. -
6Adolescent Mental Health
- Identifying Conceptual and Practical Barriers to
Addressing Need - What to Consider in Developing our Bracelet
7Conceptual Barriers Understanding Adolescents
- Myths regarding adolescents undermine parental
and provider recognition of distress - Youth want to be alone
- Youth dont talk to adults
- Youth behavior is consistent if depressed will
look depressed always / or at all - Sulking, minimal eye contact, no communication,
sleep all day, outrageous moods, angry, violent,
substance use, not eating - are normal - When in need youth just want adults to listen
8Conceptual Barriers Understanding Adolescents
- Stereotypes of adolescents keep others away and
reinforce the myths - Adolescents are rarely the puppy of choice at
the pound - Stereotypes tend to influence adult approach to
interaction little communication, passive
approach to parenting and intervention
reinforce the expected disconnect between youth
and adults
9Conceptual Barriers Understanding Adolescents
- Risk behaviors are meaningful and may or may not
be rebellious / may be palliative - Youth recognize distress in each other and go to
one another for help / give feedback - Youth friends are often alienated by adults when
mental health issues emerge - Manifestation of mental health issues in
adolescents differs from adults (e.g. sadness
versus irritability, overcompensation)
10Conceptual Barriers Stigma
- Parents are fearful of blame in seeking help I
love my child. - Concern regarding the records and the labels
- Parents sometimes choose risk of adolescents
death over risk to their future - Fear of failure or reality as a parent this
just isnt my kid to go ahead and kill
yourself - Reliance upon parents to facilitate mental health
care access despite above concerns - Youth stigmatize need for counselors equate
with need for attention or to get out of school
11Conceptual Barriers Public Health Expectations
- There is no mental health equivalent to the
federal governments commitment to childhood
immunization. David Satcher, M.D., Ph.D. - Psychosocial Immunizations
- imagine required mental health screening for
school - barriers reflect stigma around mental health
issues and problems with access to care - outcomes of preventable diseases may be less
lethal than mental health crises - parental expectation in responsibility differs
from shots - critical impact on educational process yet not
standardized
12Conceptual Barriers Public Health Expectations
- Mental illnesses are internal terrorists
- Disaster prevention versus disaster preparedness
versus crisis intervention - Public awareness and motivation regarding youth
mental illness are generally limited to headlines - Columbine High School Massacre (1999) 12
homicides / 2 suicides / 24 injured versus 4,243
completed suicides in 2001 for similar age group - Opportunity to focus on impact of bullying,
isolation, depression, violent media, social
relationships, anger management, etc. - Response gun control / metal detectors versus
mental health screening and responses
13Conceptual Barriers Public Health Expectations
- Adolescent failure to thrive concept missing
- Quality of life I survived. Daniel
- Symptoms are not the only thing to consider
- emotional and social readiness for school
- impact of staying sad or anxious for several
years during key development period - impact on learning and social development
- Most of the treatments / services adolescents
typically receive have not been evaluated to
determine efficacy across developmental periods
14Conceptual Barriers Public Health Expectations
- Challenges exist in identifying mechanisms by
which ethnicity, race and culture account for
disparities in behavioral and emotional problems
and service delivery - Lack of early detection by providers and parents
- Untrained and / or culturally insensitive
providers - Lack of parent / provider knowledge of
developmentally appropriate AND efficacious
treatment - Insurance status
- Settings where mental health care is delivered
15Conceptual Barriers Public Health Expectations
- National measurement focus on teen suicide and
teen pregnancy negative orientation - Asset-based measurement screen for strengths
and measure impact over time - Cultivating mental health versus documenting
mental illness role of public health in
shifting focus
16Conceptual Barriers Public Health Expectations
- Estimating economic burden of mental health
concerns in adolescents is understudied and
difficult to assess - multiple systems providing services
- serious events severe criminal acts / suicide
- loss in later educational and work productivity,
parental productivity - positive impact of prevention programs to
decrease role of current treatment and increase
productivity later - must involve multiple stakeholders
17Adolescent Mental Health
- Developing Public Health Strategies that
Cultivate Adolescent Mental Health - Designing Our Bracelet
18Public Health Strategies Using What Evidence
Demonstrates
- Psychosocial intervention enhances
pharmacological treatment - Multi-systemic therapy promising addresses child
and child context - Some forms of institutional care do not lead to
lasting change when adolescent is returned home - Services to delinquent youth like boot camps and
residential programs generally ineffective - Some peer-group based interventions actually
increase behavior problems
19Public Health Strategies Need for
Interdisciplinary Approaches
- Must eliminate discipline insularity
- Effective treatment practices must be shared
across disciplines - Primary care and mental health disciplines must
jointly develop and utilize screening and
prevention tools - Research should include mental health and health
disciplines
20Public Health StrategiesMaking Science
Accessible
- Development of research should begin with the
context and placement of the intervention as a
focus - Must involve youth and family, community and
treatment stakeholders, in partnership with
researchers from the beginning - Factors influencing ultimate dissemination must
be considered during development
21Public Health StrategiesImpact is Everything
- Messages must be clear and organized to overcome
adolescent-specific issues - difficult to imagine the icon of adolescent
mental health - many adolescent mental health difficulties by
nature include resistance (depression lack of
energy or hope, substance addiction, eating
disorders) - risks are behavioral involve blame
- developmental process may require that providers
be vulnerable to be effective with youth
22Public Health StrategiesImpact is Everything
- Message must be compelling
- Enlist creative partnerships to finance
interventions and outreach who will adopt the
adolescent population - Time-limited adolescence is a statutory
offense / opportunity - Now or later approach untreated mental health
issues in adolescents often become adult problems
and / or disabilities
23Public Health StrategiesImpact is Everything
- Message must be effective
- Issues are life-threatening disaster prevention
- Mental illness has no lobby or does it?
- Enlist public interest, energy and outrage
- Involve youth
- Empower families
- Encourage evaluation to measure impact
24Public Health StrategiesImpact is Everything
- Message must be exponential
- Maximize public health power / minimize public
health expenditures - Intentional epidemic / outbreak / wildfire
public health expertise reversed - Involve all layers / stakeholders
- Increasingly self-sustaining
25Adolescent Mental Health
- What will our bracelet be?
26Summary
- Discussed critical issues in adolescent mental
health as public health opportunities for
population-based disaster prevention - Encouraged use of adolescent health key data
indicators to motivate strategic action - Identified conceptual and practical barriers to
addressing adolescent mental health needs - Developed strategies for improving public health
cultivation of adolescent mental health
27I survived. - Daniel
28References
- Blueprint for Change Research on Child and
Adolescent Mental Health, Report of the National
Advisory Mental Health Councils Workgroup on
Child and Adolescent Mental Health Intervention
Development and Deployment, Executive Summary and
Recommendations (2000) - DASIS Report Adolescents with Co-Occurring
Psychiatric Disorders 2003 - National Adolescent Health Information 2004 fact
Sheet on Suicide Adolescents and Young Adults.
NAHIC (2004). - National Survey on Drug Use and Health Report
Depression Among Adolescents. Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration (2004). - National Survey on Drug Use and Health Report
Mothers Serious Mental Illness and Substance Use
Among Youths. Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration (2004).
29References
- National Survey on Drug Use and Health Report
Office of Applied Studies. Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration
(2003-2004). - National Survey on Drug Use and Health Report
Suicidal Thoughts Among Youths Aged 12 to 17 with
Major Depressive Episode. Substance Abuse and
Mental Health Services Administration (2004). - New DAWN Report Disposition of Emergency
Department Visits for Drug-Related Suicide
Attempts by Adolescents, 2004 - Preventing Child and Adolescent Mental Disorders
Research Roundtable on Economic Burden and Cost
Effectiveness (2004) - U.S. Public Health Service, Report of the Surgeon
Generals Conference on Childrens Mental Health
A National Action Agenda. Washington, DC
Department of Health and Human Services, 2000.