ADHD Treatment Flashcards

1
Q

What are the guiding principles for effective treatment in ADHD?

A
  • focus on the ECOLOGY of the child
  • take a DEVELOPMENTAL perspective
  • be FORMULATION- DRIVEN
  • attend to consultation process
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2
Q

Why should treatment focus on the ecology of the child?

A
  • Conduct problems are highly embedded in family r/s and amplified by peer relationships
  • interventions that do not address these dynamics are less likely to produce lasting change
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3
Q

What would happen if treatment did not focus on the ecology of the child?

A
  • send child back into those systems that maintained the problems in the first place
  • will not have a lasting impact on the child
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4
Q

What is the best treatment for early to middle childhood conduct problems?

A
  • parent training: working exclusively with the parents
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5
Q

What is the best treatment for middle childhood conduct problems?

A
  • parent training + youth focus components (e.g. Multisystemic Therapy including cognitive therapy,
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6
Q

What does a developmental perspective inform about treatment?

A
  • when is the best time for intervention
  • which family environment variables should be targeted
  • how to best involve the child
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7
Q

When is the optimal period for intervention?

A
  • early childhood
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8
Q

What is the reason that

A
  • taking more and more steps away from a healthy trajectory
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9
Q

What are the key parenting targets for child behaviour change in early-middle childhood?

A
  • coercive cycles (reinforcement traps) (i.e. Coercian theory, Patterson, 1982)
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10
Q

What does the coercian theory suggest about contingencies and reinforcements for the child and parent?

A
  • parent engagement with child are increasingly contingent upon misbehaviour
  • parent’s only interactions with the child are aversive/punishing
  • low positive reinforcement for appropriate behaviour
  • high positive reinforcement for misbehaviour
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11
Q

What are the keys to parenting targets for child behaviour change in late childhood/adolescence?

A
  • monitoring and supervision (skills for regulating supervision outside of the home)
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12
Q

Why do older children/adolescence need to be included as active participants with parents for treatment in CD?

A
  1. with physical development, child increasingly capable of resisting the limit setting strategies that are effective with younger children (time-out)
  2. unique developmental tasks of adolescence, unique family challenges re: problem-solving and communication, best targeted with parents- children jointly
  3. emerging cognitive resources (abstract reasoning etc). to engage in self-regulatory skills training not possible at younger ages.
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13
Q

Why does treatment need to be formulation-driven?

A
  • to plan around systemic issues that may interfere with a family’s success in implementing new strategies, a therapist needs to have a clear formulation of how child behaviour and parent behaviour may relate to those issues
    “WHAT IS THE BIG PICTURE OF THE CHILD’S ECOLOGY?”
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14
Q

What different areas

A
  • genetic and biology (temperament, health, DDs)
  • parent-child interactions (rewards for misbehaviours, social learning, instructions given, ineffective punishment, ignoring desirable behaviour)
  • things affecting parents (parents’ levels of stress, martial conflict, lack of social support, financial stress)
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15
Q

What does it mean by attending to the consultation process?

A
  • the success of therapy can first JOIN with the family to create a therapeutic team
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16
Q

What are some issues with attending to consultation processes?

A
  1. involvement of fathers
    (dont have parents working as a team together or full ‘executive subsystem)
    - the way the child behaves is dictating the family dynamics
  2. empowering parents to take positive steps (need to feel like they’re not being told what to do)
  3. maximising active engagement (e.g. role plays, homework)
17
Q

What are the 2 core components of parent training interventions?

A
  1. strategies for responding to good behaviour

2. strategies for responding to misbehaviour

18
Q

What strategies are there for responding to good behaviour?

A
  • parent attention becomes contingent on (ie, positively reinforces) positive/healthy child behaviour
19
Q

What strategies are there for responding to misbehaviour?

A
  • removes reinforcement of escalating coercion by setting limits on child behaviour using immediate, consistent, non-forceful consequences
  • a ‘behaviour correction routine’ including time-out
20
Q

How is the coercian cycle changed to a positive cycle?

A

PARENT: attention and emotion contingent on adaptive child behaviours
- DISCIPLINE is immediate, boring, over with quickly
CHILD: high positive reinforcement of appropriate behaviour; low reinforcement of misbehaviour

21
Q

What is the best way to introduce the model to the parent?

A
  • pre-empt reactions to ‘parent-training’ –> parents as therapists, “fine-tuning” rather than replacing existing practices