Title: Quiz 1: Tuesday February 10
1Quiz 1 Tuesday February 10
- 20 m.c. questions
- Emphasis on concrete details, can come from text,
or interface of text and lectures - 40 points of short answer
- Emphasis on class lectures and activities,
including material highlighted from text - Total 60 points/4 15 of final grade
2Child Psychopathology
- Negative Affectivity
- Depression in children
- First two presentations
- Reading for today Chapter 8
3Negative Affectivity
- Definition The tendency to experience aversive
emotional states best predicted by Trait
Anxiety and internalizing behavior problems - Evidence Comorbidity of child anxiety and child
depression
Dx of Depression
Yes
No
50
10
Yes
Depression scores
Dx of Anxiety
No
25
150
R.75
Anxiety Scores
4Depression in children
- Mood disorders underdetected because other
problems may be more obvious, e.g., conduct,
substance abuse, general malaise of youth - Debate over whether it even exists, or whether it
pervasively accounts for other disorders - How does it differ from adult forms of
depression? Is the same neuroendocrinology in
place? - Importance of family factors
5Assessment
- Observations
- Report measures CBCL items
- RADS overhead Self report for adolescents
- Cognitive triad Negative thoughts and
attributions - Devalue world, self, and future
6Major depressive disorder in children
- Feelings of sadness, irritability, guilt, shame
- Restlessness, agitation, reduced activity
speech, withdrawal, aggression - Feelings of worthlessness and low self esteem
- Self-critical and self-conscious pessimism,
distorted views of the future, difficulty
concentrating or remembering, self-blame - Disruptions in eating or sleeping physical
complaints diffuse physical symptoms - Prevalence 2 to 8 of children age 4 to 18
more common in late adolescence, females gt males
7Early onset depression is related to other
problems
Youth under stress who experience a loss or who
have attention, learning, or conduct disorders
are at a higher risk for depression. (American
Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry
AACAP, 1995) Almost one-third of six- to
twelve-year-old children diagnosed with major
depression will develop bipolar disorder within a
few years. (AACAP, 1995) Four out of every
five runaway youths suffer from depression.
(U.S. Select Committee on Children, Youth
Families) Clinical depression can contribute
to eating disorders. On the other hand, an
eating disorder can lead to a state of clinical
depression. (Stellefson, Medical University
of South Carolina, 1998)
8Depression and Conduct Disorders
9Depression and Conduct Disorder
- There is a similarity in symptoms
- Drop in school performance, physical symptoms,
lying, deceitfulness, acting out - Unexplained irritability, drug use
- Cognitive processing problems in both disorders
- Attributional style attributing positives to
external factors, negatives to internal factors - Family Factors and perceived negativity with
parents - Distressed verbal affect is common to anger and
conduct problems - Development within distressed family is common to
both - Siblings behave much like the target child
- Negative impact on family from the clinical
problem - Restricted range of emotional expression, esp.
poor positive affect
10Causes
- Psychodynamic theory not useful
- Attachment theory parental separation and
anxious attachment as predisposing factors - Behavioral theories Lack of positive
reinforcement or uncontrollable negative events - Cognitive theories Negative perceptual and
attributional styles, learned helplessness - Self-control theory Behavior and long-term
goals - Diathesis-stress models biological strata and
environmental stressors - Fitting theories together Figure 8.3
11Peer Relationships and Depression
12Peers and depression in children
- Peer behavior towards children, as well as
childrens perceptions of peer behavior is
important - Rejected children are prone to depression
- Social status is related to measures of cognitive
processing unpopular children are more prone to
focus on more negative words - Popularity and self perceptions are negative in
depressed children - Aggressive children see themselves as better
accepted than they really are or than depressed
children - Deviant peer affiliations predict depression
indirectly
13Treatment for depression
- Depression
- Cognitive-Behavior Therapy has shown most
short-and long-term success - 70 of children with MDD respond to treatment
- imipramimine (tricyclic) and prozac (SSRI) are
used, but there has been a failure to show
advantage of antidepressants over placebo in
carefully controlled studies - What is a double-blind study?
- Family therapy, Interpersonal Behavior Therapy
- Bipolar Disorder, marked by manic and depressive
stages - Lithium is the first treatment of choice
- High genetic loading of biploar disorder
- No research on psychosocial interventions with
biploar disorder - Regarding all depressive disorders, what
community-based interventions are useful?