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Conduct Problems

The document discusses conduct problems including oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) and conduct disorder (CD). It defines the symptoms of each disorder and notes that ODD often precedes CD. It discusses the importance and prevalence of conduct problems, citing their high societal costs. Causes include biological and environmental factors. Effective treatments are multisystemic and involve parents, schools, and the community.

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Bismah
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views21 pages

Conduct Problems

The document discusses conduct problems including oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) and conduct disorder (CD). It defines the symptoms of each disorder and notes that ODD often precedes CD. It discusses the importance and prevalence of conduct problems, citing their high societal costs. Causes include biological and environmental factors. Effective treatments are multisystemic and involve parents, schools, and the community.

Uploaded by

Bismah
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CONDUCT PROBLEMS

TODAY’S PLAN
 Definitions
& Overview
 Importance & Prevalence

 Causes

 Treatment
DEFINITIONS & OVERVIEW
OPPOSITIONAL DEFIANT DISORDER (ODD)
 Pattern of minimum of 4 symptoms for at least 6
months
 Angry/irritable mood
 e.g., loses temper, touchy, resentful
 Argumentative/defiant behavior
 e.g., deliberately annoys others; blames others; refuses to
comply; argues with authority figures
 Vindictiveness
 e.g., spiteful
CONDUCT DISORDER (CD)

 Pattern in which basic rights of others or societal


norms are violated; minimum of 3 of 15 symptoms
in the past year:
 Aggression toward animals or people
 e.g., initiates fights, uses weapon(s), physically cruel, stealing
while confronting a victim, forced sexual activity
 Destruction of property
 e.g., firesetting
 Deceitfulness or theft
 e.g., burglary, “cons” others, stealing items
 Serious violations of rules
 e.g., stays out past curfew before age 13; runs away overnight at
least twice; often truant before age 13
CD SPECIFIER (AGE OF ONSET)
 Childhood-onset (at least 1 sx before age 10)
 usually male

 more aggressive acts

 persist in antisocial behavior over time

 often concurrent ODD and ADHD


CD SPECIFIER (AGE OF ONSET)
 Adolescent-onset (sxs after age 10)
 girl to boy ratio more balanced

 Less severity/less psychopathology

 less likely to commit violent offenses or


persist in antisocial behavior over time
 More normal peer relationships
ANOTHER SPECIFIER FOR CONDUCT DISORDER
 With limited prosocial emotions (also
called CU for callous-unemotional)
 Must display at least 2 sx over at least 12
months in multiple relationships + settings
 Lack of remorse or guilt

 Callous – lack of empathy

 Unconcerned about performance

 Shallow or deficient affect


CD/ODD CONNECTION

 Most cases of CD are preceded by ODD


 Most children with CD continue to display
ODD symptoms
 Most children with ODD do not progress to
CD
CONNECTIONS WITH OTHER DISORDERS
 ~40% of children with CD later develop
antisocial personality disorder
 Signs of lack of conscience occur in some
children as young as 3-5 years (CU traits)
CONNECTIONS WITH OTHER DISORDERS
 ~50% of children with CD also have ADHD
 ~50% of children with conduct problems also
have a depression or anxiety disorder
IMPORTANCE
 Most costly mental health problem in North
America
 Public costs across healthcare, juvenile justice,
+ educational systems estimated to be at least
$10,000 per child
 Lifetime cost to society per child who leaves
high school for life of crime/substance abuse: ~
$2 million
PREVALENCE

 Lifetime prevalence rates


 10% for ODD (11% for males, 9% for females)

 9% for CD (12% for males, 7% for females)


CAUSES
CAUSES: BIOLOGICAL
 Biological factors:
 Adoption + twin studies: 50% or more of
variance in antisocial behavior is hereditary,
 Difficult temperament, impulsivity, tendency
to seek rewards, learning difficulties, and
insensitivity to punishment may create
antisocial “propensity”
CAUSES: ENVIRONMENTAL
 In children with CU traits, CD persists
regardless of parenting quality
 Family instability and stress

 Parental criminality and psychopathology (e.g.,


substance abuse)
CAUSES: ENVIRONMENTAL CONT’D
 Physical or sexual abuse
 Peer rejection

 Delinquent peer group

 Violent neighborhood
TREATMENT & PREVENTION
TREATMENT AND PREVENTION: OVERVIEW
• Typically begins w/school referral
• Most effective combine approaches across many
settings
• Not very effective:
• office-based
• group treatments
TREATMENT AND PREVENTION
 Multisystemic Treatment (MST)
 Sees adolescents as functioning within
interconnected social systems
 Antisocial behavior results from/is maintained
by transactions within or between any of the
systems
 http://mstservices.com/
TREATMENT AND PREVENTION
• Parent management training (PMT) (effective for
children under 12)
 Treatment sessions cover: use of commands,
rules, praise, rewards, mild punishment,
behavioral contracts to change behavior of
child
 Homework helps generalize skills
 http://www.russellbarkley.org/

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