Title: Behavior Management
1Behavior Management
- David Krych, MS-CCC-SLP
- ReMed Recovery Care Centers
2Communication Disorders Associated With TBI
- Pathophysiology of the disorder includes frontal
lobes, limbic system and connections between said
structures Ylvisaker et. al 2001 - Discourse described as disoriented, confused,
stimulus bound, disorganized, reduced in
initiation, reduced in inhibition. Hagan, C,
1984
3Specific Discourse Issues
- Impaired cohesion and coherence, Hartley, 91
Liles, 89 - Impaired story grammar, Coelho, 95
- Difficulty initiating and maintaining
conversation, Togher, 97 - Failure to meet the informational needs of the
listener, McDonald, 93 - Poor topic management, situational
inappropriateness, - violation of turn taking, Snow, 1998
4Psychosocial
- Hibbard, 1998 n 100 patients mean 8 years p.i.
Depression 61. - Kruetzer, 2001 n722 patients mean 4 years p.i.
42 Depression - Draper et al, 2007 n53 10 years post injury,
Depression 46, Anxiety 20 and aggressive
behavior 12. - Dependent behaviors
- Emotional lability
- Lack of initiation
- Behavioral issues Irritability, Aggression,
Disinhibition - Pickelsmire et al, 2007 n 1830 66.5 idd unmet
need help managing mood, stress and emotional
upset.
5Family Status
- Lezak, 1995 80 of individuals w/TBI go through
divorce or estrangement- 2 yrs post - Current census data about 50 of all marriages
end in divorce. Within 3 years 74 remarry. - Ashley Krych, JROM,vol1,4, 1997
- 74 no change of marital status mean 7 years
post dc
6Behavior Is A Continuum
7Continuum
- Withdrawal to physical aggression It all counts.
- Therapists sometimes have rather narrow margins
of acceptability. - We want our clients to be normal.
- But normal for what scale?
- This isnt measured on t score tables.
8How Unwanted Behaviors May Develop
- Predisposition due to cognitive impairment
- A primitive form of communication
- Early displays of unwanted behavior are followed
by results that are often intended to produce
comfort or achieve the quick solution
9How Unwanted Behaviors May Develop, continued
- These results ultimately strengthen unwanted
behaviors - Over time this inadvertent strengthening of
unwanted behavior makes likelihood of recovery
less favorable and more difficult - Extinction procedures may also initially produce
more frequent or intense unwanted behavior
10Stroke vs. TBI
- Stroke is a discreet event Sequelae are more
defined and predictable/usually L hemisphere. - TBI, even minor or moderate injury, represents a
more diffuse form of injury. - Coup Contra-coup Diffuse Axonal Injury
- Involvement of Frontal Lobes in TBI is well
documented Levin, H. 1994 - Right hemisphere damage in stroke is infrequent
11Frontal Lobes
- Define what we attend to and how that attention
is manifest. Stuss et all, (2005) - Rather than a generic functional system,
- Different functions or processes associated
with different frontal brain regions that have to
contribute in different ways to perform even a
very simple task
12Brain Behavior Relationship
- Still difficult for society at large to
appreciate the above statement. - Especially when it comes to right hemisphere and
frontal lobe behaviors - This can also be difficult for treaters to truly
appreciate. - Changed neurology changed behavior changed
person.
13Context
- Behavior does not occur in a vacuum.
- It is contingent and situational.
- What is acceptable in one place is not acceptable
in another. - Social rules Most of our expectations come, not
from our understanding of the BI and Behavior
Management issues, but from our social
expectations.
14Some Things to Leave at the Door
- Our sensitivities
- The box we came in PT, OT, ST etc
- The idea that behavior management is something
that is done to someone. - My mood or how I feel today.
- The ghost of therapies past.
- The idea that the psychology department is in the
business of fixing behavior.
15Some Things to Remember
- Be patient
- Consistency- within myself and ...
- The team across time
- Inconsistency is worse than no management plan at
all. - Commitment to see the plan through and adapt as
needed.
16General Guidelines
- Increased rest time - monitor and reduce as
fatigue lessens. - Keep the environment simple and predictable
Beware over stimulation. - Keep instructions simple Try not to over
verbalize. - Set goals and give feed back. Try to do this
visually as well as verbally.
17General Guidelines, continued
- 5. Remain calm and redirect to task. Jones and
McCaughey recommend Gentle teaching - Ignore off task behavior entirely, redirect
to task reward. (Bailey 92- some criticism). - 6. Provide limited choices. (Dyer et.al.92)
found that clients with choice did better than
those with no choice or open ended choice.
18General Guidelines, continued
- 7. Decrease chance of failure (Mace and
Belifore,90). Work at the 80 level and lead
with known success. - 8. Vary activity within consistent skill set.
Tactics vs. strategy. - 9. Be over prepared. Remember the clients
variability. Some days fast some days slow. - 10. Task analyze Break down tasks. Each step
can then be treated as a completed task.
Remember backward and forward chaining. -
19Behavior Plan Format
- Short and long term goals
- Operational definition of target behavior
- Data collection system
- Treatment procedures
- Regardless of the environment there is a
wide range of competence in carrying out
behavior treatment programs.
20Program Components
- Base line
- Choose behaviors to be managed and how it should
be done Reinforcers? - Frequency monitors
- Graph over time For staff and client.
- If pharmacology is in the picture be aware of
impact.
21Behavior Principles
- Reinforcement
- any consequence that increases the probability of
a response occurring again - Two types of Reinforcement
- Positive Reinforcement
- Negative Reinforcement
- Punishment
- any consequence that decreases the probability of
a response occurring again - Two types of Punishment
- Positive Punishment
- Negative Punishment
22Stress Model of The Assault Cycle Smith PART
- Assault is the reaction to extreme stress
- Rehabilitation process is very stressful
- Daily confrontation of deficits sets up a fight
or flight paradigm. (Remember the continuum) - Some withdraw some become combative
23Environmental Model
- Behavior is a product of circumstance within
which it occurs. - Expectations
- Level of sound/lighting
- Crowding/over stimulation
- Tone of voice
- Scheduling
24(No Transcript)
25Trigger
- Stimulus or event that exceeds the clients
tolerance for stress (demands for compliance or
being touched). - Any techniques for prevention or accommodation
need to happen before the triggering event.
(General Guidelines)
26Escalation
- Increasing levels of agitation or change from
baseline. - De-escalation techniques are used at this time.
- The earlier the better
27De-escalation Techniques
- Active listening begins with eye contact and
goes to verbal responses of paraphrasing,
restating and clarification. - Orientation Gelski et al 95 Disorientation
shown to be a major contributing factor to
aggressive behavior in TBI. Use orientation to
place, time, who is present. - Redirection Move to a known skill, present
another activity requiring less stress to perform
etc.
28De-escalation Techniques, continued
- Setting limits Remain calm and outline the
expectation and clearly define the consequence of
the behavior. If you strike at me I will have to
leave the room. (withdrawal of attention) - Withdrawal of attention Opposite of active
listening. A very powerful technique especially
when paired with active listening for
reinforcement. This helps define the relationship
between attention and calm interactive behavior. - Contracting Clearly defines the parameters of
expectation/not for avoidance of the task.
29Crisis
- Physical aggression, i.e. property damage or
aggression toward another - Some include verbal aggression.
30Recovery
- Level of activity is decreasing.
- Typically even the most aggressive individual
cant keep up the energy level for a prolonged
crisis period. - The recovery side of the curve tends to be fairly
steep.
31Post Crisis Depression
- Characterized by behavior that falls below base
line. - The client may require a short rest period or a
less active task until back at base line levels.
32Successful Community Re-Settlement
- True community resettlement requires
concentrated, well-planned efforts. It requires
family and professionals, planning, clinical
excellence, proactive treatment, creativity and
resourcefulness.
33Legal Model
- Legal categories of assaultive behavior
- Simple assault Threatening gestures or speech
- Assault and battery Physical force and threats
- Aggravated assault Attempt to cause serious
bodily harm - Professional Assault Response Training
manual
34Reasonable Response
- Therapists can legally protect themselves against
varying degrees of assault and are bound by
reasonable response - Simple assault communication
- Assault and battery evasive self defense
- Aggravated assault physical intervention may be
called for but only from specifically trained
individuals. ( PART, CPI, Law enforcement)
35Medication
- Antianxiety, Antidepressant, Stimulants,
Antipsychotic, Atypical Use. - Whatever the Pharma intervention it must be
closely managed Neuropsychiatry is a must and
monitor for impact.
36Conclusion
- The place where you stop when you are tired of
thinking. Arthur Block