Title: Anxiety Disorders: Separation Anxiety Disorder
1Anxiety Disorders Separation Anxiety Disorder
- Prof. Debbie van der Westhuizen
- Head Child and Adolescent Units
- Weskoppies Hospital
2Separation anxiety is very normal among
preschoolers, especially those who are going to
school for the first time
3Separation anxiety (SA)
- SA is a developmentally appropriate response in
young children on separation from primary
caregivers (normal between 6 -30 months
intensifies 13-18months declines between 3-5
years due to cognitive maturation)
4Separation anxiety Disorder (SAD)
- SAD is a developmentally inappropriate
excessive distress (worry/fear) associated with
separation from primary caregiver 4 of
school-aged children, common in 7- 8 year olds - Only anxiety disorder in DSM-IV-TR included under
disorders usually first diagnosed in infancy,
childhood or adolescence
5SAD shadowing parents
- SAD is a developmentally inappropriate distress
(excessive worry/fear) associated with separation
from primary caregiver - Anxiety may present prior to, during, and/or in
anticipation of separation - Fear that harm may come to themselves or parents-
which will result in permanent separation - Difficulty going to places without parents
- Specific themes nightmares of kidnap or being
taken away - To avoid separation complaints of
stomach-aches/headaches
6Case Living in her parent's shadow
- Susan is a 7 year old referred due to concerns
regarding anxiety and school refusal - Chief complaint Susan is afraid I will forget
her at school, her mother stated - History of present illness For the past 3 months
Susan had fears about separating from her parents
to go to school, becoming progressively worse - She has extreme distress on Sunday nights,
trouble falling asleep with worries about bad
things happening to her parents while at school
a burglar will break into their house and kill
her mother
7History of present complaint
- When in time for school, Susan actively resist by
hiding under the bed or clinging to her mother
while complaining about stomachache - If she is at school, she intermittently appears
sad and tearful, tells the teacher she needs to
phone home to see if her mother is safe. - She frequently asks to go to the nurses office as
she has stomachache or feeling dizzy - Her mom is considering quitting her job she is
shadowing her parents at home and slipping into
her parents' bed due to bad dreams of monsters
capturing them
8Past history
- Psychiatric never participated in therapy or
been given a prescription for psychotropic
medication - Medical history small for gestational age prone
to illnesses as an infant - Developmental history as infant and toddler slow
to warm up to new people approached unfamiliar
situations with avoidance separation reactions
during preschool years - Social history She lives with biological
parents no history of abuse and neglect mother
recently returned to work as a retail manager,
limited contact with peers outside school
9Past history
- Family history Susan's mother has a history of a
and panic disorder. Her father has recently been
diagnosed with recurrent major depressive
disorder and being treated with antidepressant
medication. Susan's older brother has social
phobia and dropped out of high school because of
impairing fears and avoidance of social and
performance situations - Mental status evaluation Susan was nicely
dressed and groomed appeared her stated age
10MSE
- She sat on her mother's lap during the
evaluation engaged in minimal eye contact - When asked direct questions- provided limited
responses - She refused to separate from her mother and would
not allow her mother to leave the interview room
without her - Susan's mood was described as nervous and
irritable at times of separation
11MSE
- Susan's mood was described by her mother as
anxious - There was no evidence of psychosis
- Her thinking was logical and coherent
- Susan stated that she would jump out of her
mother's moving car if required to go to school - While at home she constantly shadows her parents
most evenings slips into parents bedroom afraid
she will fall asleep and never wake up
12Psychotherapeutic perspective
- Susan presented with symptoms suggesting
separation anxiety disorder (SAD) and problems
with school refusal - She experiences distress upon separation from her
parents, worries that harm will befall them,
afraid that she will be forgotten at school,
refuses to go to school because of her separation
concerns - Distressed when at home without her parents
will not sleep alone at night, has nightmares
with separation theme reports stomachache and
faintness - Separation concerns present since preschool
- Susan's symptoms are reported to interfere
meaningfully with her academic and social
functioning ( unable to attend school or peers)
13Diagnostic formulation
- Multi-informant assessment would be helpful (data
from Susan, parents, her school teacher) - Self-report and teacher measures of anxiety an
related emotional concerns - Parent-and teacher's-report measures of Susan's
behavior an index of academic achievement
physical exam to rule out medical factors that
may contribute to her symptoms. Paternal
assessment for psychopathology given the mom's
panic- and dad's depressive disorder - Both biological and psychosocial factors likely
play a role Susan may have been pre exposed
(behavioral inhibition) as well as exposed to
parents anxiety (modeling behavior)
14Psycho therapeutic perspective
- Susan's parents behave in a manner that allows
her to avoid school and other anxious situations - They pick her up from school when the nurse calls
and let her sleep in their bed, allow her to go
with dad to work instead of working on class work - This pattern of parental accommodation to Susan's
avoidance contributes to and maintains her
anxious avoidance, which may prevent her from
mastering age -appropriate developmental
challenges
S
15Psycho therapeutic treatment recommendations
- First choice treatment for Susan is CBT
(cognitive-behavioral therapy). Numerous
independent studies have supported the short-term
and long-term efficacy of CBT treatments - CBT program would include having Susan to
identify her somatic reactions to anxiety,
identify and challenge her anxious thoughts,
develop a plan to cope with anxiety-provoking
situations, practice her coping plan, engage in
exposure tasks, evaluate efforts at managing
anxiety, therapist orchestrating role-play
opportunities, teaching relaxation skills,
modeling coping behavior, rewarding efforts - Facilitate treatment gains by outside session
activities (practicing skills learned in session) - Parents to be orientated to treatment components
and participate in exposure tasks
16Psycho-therapeutic treatment goals
- Improve Susan's coping skills by relaxation
techniques to identify anxious thoughts, use
appropriate coping thoughts and problem-solving
strategies and to self-reward for effort - As a result Susan will show a reduction in
avoidance and anxious arousal - She will start to return to school for partial
then full day by reduction of phone calls made
to her parents - Be able to stay at home with babysitter and
increase social activities (peers) Girl Scouts
17Additional interventions
- If academic difficulties at initial assessments,
further neuro-psychological and
psycho-educational testing may be needed
(limitations in cognitive functioning could
detract from treatment outcome) - If parents experience distressing psychological
symptoms, they should be referred appropriately
for focused evaluation and treatment - If treatment is unsuccessful (partially or
completely) the number of CBT (cognitive
behavior therapy) treatment sessions can be
extended with augmenting CBT with Medication
(SSRI)
18Psycho-pharmacological perspective
- Anxiety about attending school (main presenting
problem) can be a manifestation of various
concerns - Evidenced by morbid feelings about parent's
welfare, overwhelming wish to contact mother
whenever school attendance has been forced,
somatic symptoms at school with request to return
home - Parents are accommodating her avoidance behavior
reflecting the parent's own anxiety - Susan has difficulty sleeping in her own bed
concerns about death and dying are not unusual in
SAD - Many children with SAD also have another anxiety
disorder Susan is reported to also worry about
school performance, family finances and peer
acceptance a diagnosis of general anxiety
disorder will only be considered if these worries
reached clinical significance
19Diagnosis separation anxiety disorder
- The only diagnosis that is appropriate of Susan
is that of separation anxiety disorder Susan's
mom is reported to suffer from panic disorder and
the dad from depression. Each disorder is
associated significantly with SAD in off-spring
and a history of both further increases the risk - Fear something bad will happen to them or
primary caretaker resulting in permanent
separation
20Treatment separation anxiety disorder
- Treatment recommendations of childhood anxiety
disorders is consistent with all other child
psychopharmacology in that agents effectively in
adults are used in children - Well-documented efficacy of SSRIs (serotonin
re-uptake inhibitors) in virtually all adult
anxiety disorders have led to application in
children anxiety disorders - Fluoxetine is first choice, long-acting
behavioral disinhibition (nastiness, rages,
impulsiveness) is not rare in children treated
with SSRIS (no standard dosages for children)
start low go slow
21Diagnostic criteria for SAD
- A. Developmentally inappropriate-excessive
anxiety concerning separation from home or those
primarily attached - 1.Recurrent distress when separation from
home/attachments - 2.Persistent worry about losing/harm befalling
attachment - 3.Persistent worry that event will lead to
separation - 4. Persistent reluctance/refusal to go to school
- 5.Peresistent fear/reluctance to be alone
- 6.Persistent reluctance/refusal to go to sleep
alone - 7.Repeated nightmares (theme of separation)
- 8.Repeated complaints of physical symptoms(
headaches, stomach-aches)
22Diagnostic criteria for SAD
- B. Duration of disturbance at least 4 weeks
- C. Onset before age 18 years
- D. Disturbance causes clinical distress, or
impairment in functioning (social, academic,
occupational or other) - E. Disturbance does not occur during PDD
(pervasive developmental disorder)
schizophrenia, or other psychotic disorders or
better accounted for by agoraphobia - Early onset before age 6 years
23SAD co-morbidity
24Aetiology, Mechanisms, Risk factors
- Attachment attachment theory suggests that
predisposition to anxiety can be exacerbated or
alleviated by type of mother-child attachment - Temperament behavioural inhibition is a
genetically based temperamental trait defined as
childs reaction to unfamiliar situations
increase the risk for SAD and other anxiety
disorders at age 3 - Genetic and environmental factors a study
supported both genetic and non-shared
environmental contributions to SAD - Parental anxiety Offspring of parents with
anxiety disorders are at risk for developing
them most common in children were SAD and GAD - Parenting style parental rejection, parental
control, and parental intrusiveness (unnecessary
assistance with childs self-help task)
25Prevention
- Target both parents and youth in prevention of
SAD - parenting skills programs to improve
- parent-child relationships
- parenting style
- family functioning
- anxiety management
26Evaluation
- Formal evaluation to distinguish the specific
anxiety disorder - Assess severity of symptoms
- Determine functional impairment
- Assessing for diagnoses that may mimic anxiety
disorders physical or other psychiatric
conditions - Interview parent(s) and child or together (not
able) - Contact teachers, or day-care on functioning in
settings outside home
27Treatment
- Multimodal treatment plan where anxiety symptoms
are moderate to severe with substantial
impairment - Psycho-education parents need assistance in
understanding the nature of the anxiety (benefit
when concerns are validated and self-blame
minimized) School consultation - CBT during initial sessions, parents child to
be educated about behaviours that maintain SAD
over time (avoidance of anxiety provoking
situations) and treatment approaches to
alleviate anxiety (thought identification,
cognitive modification, behavioural exposures) - Pharmacotherapy SSRIs first-choice medication
- Family intervention crucial in school refusal
28Treatment
- Behaviour modification gradual adjustment
strategies to achieve a return to school and to
separate from parents - Biological off spring of parents with anxiety
disorder and panic disorder with agoraphobia are
prone to SAD - SSRIs first-choice medication fluvoxamine
(50-250mg/day) or fluoxetine (5-20mg/day) or
Sertraline - Benadryl (diphenhydramine) for control of sleep
disturbances - Alternative Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs)
more cardiovascular side-effects, dangerous in
overdose - Caution benzodiazepines only short-term,
paradoxal disinhibition, addiction central
nervous system depressant
29Psychotherapeutic treatments
- CBT (Cognitive-behavioural therapy for anxiety
disorders) is best proven for youth with SAD - Six essential CBT components include
psycho-education, somatic management, cognitive
restructuring, problem-solving exposure, relapse
prevention - Parent-child interaction therapy
30Psychotherapeutic treatments
- Child-Adolescent Anxiety Multi-modal study
compared effectiveness of 12 weeks of sertraline
vs CBT vs sertraline CBT, and placebo in
moderate to severe SAD, GAD and/or SP - Post-treatment (rated on Clinical Global
Impressions-Improvement scale) very much
improved 55 who received sertraline, 60- CBT,
81 who received combination treatment and 24
who received placebo - Other individualized education plan effective
strategies to help with coping in classroom
31The End