Title: Mental Health Treatment Strategies That Work
1Mental Health Treatment Strategies That Work
Building FASD State Systems Meeting San
Francisco, CA May 10, 2006 Therese Grant, Ph.D.
University of Washington Fetal Alcohol and
Drug Unit Parent-Child Assistance Program
(PCAP) 180 Nickerson, Suite 309 Seattle,
Washington 98109 (206)543-7155
2Limited research available on effective FASD
interventions
- Premji et al., (2004) reviewed the literature on
FASD interventions with youth - 10 studies found of 7 reviewed
- 2 medication trials
- 1 cognitive control study
- 1 supplementary reading program
- 1 tutoring program
- 1 functional analysis study
- 1 multisystems collaborative community based
intervention
3With no mental health intervention studies to
draw on What to Do?
- Look to
- Clinical data from professionals, teachers, and
parents who have seen positive changes using an
intervention. - Practices shown to be effective with other
disorders that are being adapted for those with
FASD (e.g., ADD).
4Theres no cookbook solution for FASD intervention
- One-size doesnt fit all
- - Each individual has a different
neuropsychological profile (depending on timing
and dosage of prenatal alcohol exposure). -
- - Variability is the hallmark of FASD (within
individuals AND between individuals).
5A source of FASD mental health problems organic
brain damage associated with prenatal alcohol
exposure
- The primary disability of FASD is permanent brain
damage, manifest as neuropsychological deficits
and neurobehavioral problems.
6(No Transcript)
7FASD Neurobehavioral Disability
- Neuropsychological deficits do not go away.
- They impact the individuals ability to
participate in interventions because of problems
with - Executive functioning
- (sequencing of behavior, cognitive flexibility,
response inhibition, planning, organization of
behavior) - Attention
- Memory
- Hypersensitivity to sensory stimulation
- Impulsivity
- Receptive language
8Strategy Direct Therapeutic Intervention
- Treat primary mental health problems (e.g.,
depression, anxiety disorder) with interventions
adapted to the individuals neuropsychological
and health profile.
9Strategy Direct Therapeutic Intervention
- PRINCIPLES
- Accommodation vs. Cure Cant cure the existing
brain damage - Change the environment, not the person (physical
environment, attitudes) - Individualize Base intervention on the persons
unique neuropsychological and health profile - Adapt interventions Alter existing
interventions based on individuals learning
style, memory problems, attention deficits, etc.
- Maintain intervention Consistency
- Involve others
10A Second Source of Mental Health Problems
- Distress caused when a person with FASD does not
receive appropriate support to address their
neurobehavioral deficits, leading to chronic
failure, loss, frustration, victimization
(secondary mental health problems).
11Strategy Comprehensive Prevention Intervention
- Provide sustained, comprehensive, multi-systemic
and developmentally appropriate support to the
individual with FASD.
12Strategy Comprehensive Prevention Intervention
- PRINCIPLES
- Multi-systemic (medical care mental health
school social service vocational training
agency social services family church) - Multi-modal (individual therapy family therapy
medication vocational training/job coaching
case management support groups) - Individualized (based on comprehensive
assessment) - Life-span perspective (sustain the support)
- Family-based (involve caregivers/advocates)
13Mental Health
- Psychotherapy focusing on concrete issues (e.g.,
anger management social skills coping with
depression) - Therapy should also address the emotional pain of
being different, having a disability - Refer to support groups for individuals with FASD
and their families - Refer for family therapy
- Respite care for family members to prevent
burnout and development of stress-related health
problems
14Mental Health
- Traditional talk therapy is not helpful due to
the language, memory, and attention problems
typical of individuals with FASD - BUT, psychotherapy, adapted to the individuals
learning style (i.e., multi-sensory vs. only
auditory-verbal role playing use of art) can be
very beneficial - Requires creativity, persistence, clinical
intuition on the part of the therapist - Involve patient in the process (learning style
cultural sensitivity)
15Mental Health
- Carefully monitor suicidal ideation
- Individuals with FASD _at_ risk for suicide
- Considerable overlap between the risk factors for
suicide and the clinical profile of FASD (e.g.,
impulsivity co-occurring mood disorder
substance abuse problems) - Also vulnerable due to job loss, relational
loss, social isolation
16Mental Health
- Psychiatric medication
- Medication management is complex
- organic brain damage (structural and/or
neurochemical) - alcohol-related birth defects (e.g., liver)
affect metabolism of medication - presence of multiple co-morbid conditions
- Risk overmedication negative side effects
- Benefit control symptoms allow individual to
participate in interventions
17Social Relationships
- Arrange recreational activities that provide safe
social contacts and friendships - Provide ongoing education regarding appropriate
sexual behavior and how to protect against
victimization - Monitor social relationships and use of leisure
time - Teach friendship skills
18Financial
- Guardianship of funds may be required or a
protective payee - Individual should be raised with the idea that
he/she will need help managing money - Monitoring finances to ensure individual is
living within means and not being financially
victimized
19Vocational
- Specialized job training
- Sheltered employment
- Long-term job coaching/training
- Special focus on social aspects of work (getting
along with co-workers inappropriate vs.
appropriate behavior at work)
20Physical Health
- Regular primary health care
- Specialty care if there are ARBDs affecting
kidney, liver or heart - Ongoing education regarding appropriate family
planning - Focus on the more reliable methods of family
planning (e.g., IUD)
21Housing
- Residential placement may be necessary
- In-home support for those able to live
independently - Ongoing supervision and monitoring to ensure
safety
22FASCETS Oregon Fetal Alcohol Project
- Three-year study examining the efficacy of
interventions that addressed the neurocognitive
issues of FASD - Trained multidisciplinary/multi-systemic teams
who worked with children/adolescents (ages 3-14) - Pretest-posttest results (N19)
- Reduced irritability, disruptiveness, anger,
aggression, and depression in the children and
adolescents - Reduced levels of stress in adult caregivers
- Improved self-efficacy in parents and
professionals (Malbin, 2006)
23- Diane Malbin
- FASCETS (Fetal Alcohol Syndrome Consultation
Education and Training Services, Inc.) -
- P.O. Box 83175
- Portland, Oregon 97283
- Phone/Fax 503-621-1271
- www.fascets.org
- dmalbin_at_fascets.org
-
24Parent Child Assistance Program Double Jeopardy
Project
PCAP An intensive, 3-year advocacy/case
management intervention serving high-risk alcohol
and/or drug abusing mothers. Double Jeopardy
One-year project funded by the March of Dimes to
assist women in PCAP with FASD and develop a
community service training model Grant, T.,
Huggins, J., Connor, P., Streissguth, A.
(2005) Grant, T., Huggins, J., Connor, P.,
Pedersen, J., Whitney, N., Streissguth, A.
(2004)
25Components of PCAP Relevant for Individuals with
FASD
- Each mother paired with an advocate for 3 years
- Advocate develops and coordinates a network of
contacts with family, friends, and providers - Advocate links client with appropriate community
services and/or providers and coordinates this
service network - Individualized service plan
- Advocates also provide advocacy for other family
members as needed
26Psychosocial Profile PCAP FASD Clients (N19)
Average age 22 Years (Range 14-36) Mostly
white (60), unmarried (85), and poorly
educated (45) Troubled life history profile
Family history drug/alcohol abuse (100)
Sexual abuse (79) Physical abuse (84)
Unstable and disrupted care giving (100) High
levels of psychiatric distress and behavioral
problems Poor quality of life relative to other
at-risk populations
27Advocates ExperienceShe just doesnt get it!
- The impact of neuropsychological deficits was
obvious. - Advocates had to modify their usual approaches.
- Clients were often unable to learn new skills
or learned them very slowly.
28Role of Advocate
- Implemented an intervention plan appropriate
for an FASD client - Helped providers understand the relationship
between organic brain damage and the FASD
clients behavior - Reinforced use of clinical management
strategies
29Strategies When TreatingClients with FASD
- Use short sentences, concrete examples, and avoid
analogies - Present information using multiple modes
- Simple step-by-step instructions (written and/or
with pictures) - Role-playing
- Ask patient to demonstrate skills (dont rely
solely on verbal responses) - Revisit important points during each session
30Strategies When TreatingIndividuals with FASD
- Teach generalization (dont assume it will occur)
- Help client identify physical releases when
escalating emotions become overwhelming - Be alert for changes/transitionsmonitor more
carefully, do advance problem-solving
31- "I thought I was weird. I thought I didn't
belong here. And then when I talked to (PCAP
advocate), it was like wow! You know what Im
talking about! - - A PCAP Client with FASD
32Community Service Providers What We Found
- Providers knew very little about FASD.
- Providers had limited direct experience with
this population. - Few services were suited for individuals with
FASD. - Obtaining a diagnosis in adulthood was
difficult. - Even for experienced PCAP advocates, working
with an FASD client was more difficult than
working with a typical PCAP client.
33Educating Providers
- We identified key providers interested in the
problem, and willing to work with a PCAP client
with FASD - We provided FASD education, a PCAP case
manager, and back-up consultation as problems
arose - Education hands-on experience FASD
demystified - Providers learned to deliver services
appropriately tailored to specific needs of
FASD patients.
3412-month Outcomes
16/19 were receiving medical /or mental health
care 14/19 were abstinent from both drugs and
alcohol (11 maintained abstinence 3 newly in
recovery) 5/19 were still using drugs/alcohol
but 3 of these 5 were using reliable birth
control methods (2 tubal ligations, 1 Depo
Provera). 14/19 were using contraception
regularly (Depo 7 Tubal 3 IUD 2
OCPs 2) 16/19 obtained stable housing
35Reflection on Outcomes
- Result We connected clients to providers and
educated providers about FASD - Problem People with FASD require coordinated
services throughout the lifespan - Conclusion Need a FAS Advocate program (FASA)
modeled after PCAP that provides longer-term
advocacy to help clients and families navigate
complex community systems of care
36Conclusion Need for FAS Advocate program (FASA)
modeled after PCAP that provides longer-term
advocacy
- Well-trained advocate assigned to an FASD client
and his/her family - Link client with community services and
providers - Help client and family navigate complex community
systems of care - Advocate supported by intensive training,
supervision, and peer support