Disruptive Behaviour Disorders Flashcards

1
Q

Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) criteria

A

(A) pattern of angry/irritable mood, argumentative/defiant behavior, or vindictiveness lasting at least 6 months as evidenced by at least 4 symptoms from any of the following categories (angry/irritable mood, argumentative/defiant bx, vindictiveness), and exhibited during interaction with a least one individual who is not a sibling
(A8) persistence and frequency of these behaviors should be used to distinguish a behavior that is within normal limits from behavior that is symptomatic. For children younger than 5 years, the behavior should occur on most days for a period of at least 6 months. For individuals 5 years or older the behavior should occur at least once per week for 6 months. Other factors should also be considered, such as whether the frequency and intensity of the behaviors are outside a range that is normative for the individual’s developmental level, gender, and culture.
(B) he disturbance in behavior is associated with distress in the individual or others in his or her immediate social context (e.g., family peer group, work colleagues), or it impacts negatively on social, educational, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
(C) The behaviors do not occur exclusively during the course of a psychotic, substance-use, depressive, or bipolar disorder. Also, the criteria are not met for disruptive mood disorder.

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2
Q

ODD angry/irritable mood

A
  • loses temper
  • touchy or easily annoyed
  • angry or resentful
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3
Q

ODD argumentative/defiant bx

A
  • argues with authority figures or, for children and adolescents, with adults
  • actively defies or refuses to comply with requests from authority figures or with rules
  • deliberately annoys others
  • blames others for his or her mistakes or misbehavior
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4
Q

ODD vindictiveness

A
  • Has been spiteful or vindictive at least twice within the past 6 months
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5
Q

ODD severity specifiers

A
  • mild: sx are confined to one setting
  • moderate: some sx occur in at least two settings
  • severe: some sx are present in at least three settings
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6
Q

conduct disorder (CD) criteria

A

(A) repetitive and persistent pattern of behavior in which the basic rights of others or major age-appropriate societal norms or rules are violated, as manifested by the presence of at least 3 of the following 15 criteria in the past 12 months from any of the categories below, with at least one criterion present in the past 6 months
categories: aggression to people/animals, destruction of property, deceitfulness or theft, serious violations of rules
(B) The disturbance in behavior causes clinically significant impairment in social, academic, or occupational functioning.
(C) If the individual is 18 years or older, criteria are not met for Antisocial Personality Disorder

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7
Q

CD aggression to people/animals

A
  • bullies, threatens, or intimidates others
  • initiates physical fights
  • has used a weapon that can cause serious physical harm to others
  • Has been physically cruel to people.
  • has been physically cruel to animals
  • Has stolen while confronting a victim (mugging, extortion)
  • Has forced someone into sexual activity
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8
Q

CD destruction of property

A
  • Has deliberately engaged in fire setting, with the intention of causing serious damage.
  • Has deliberately destroyed others’ property (other than by fire setting)
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9
Q

CD deceitfulness or theft

A
  • Has broken into someone else’s house, building, or car.
  • lies to obtain goods or favors or to avoid obligations (‘cons’ others)
  • Has stolen items of nontrivial value without confronting a victim (shoplifting, forgery)
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10
Q

CD serious violations of rules

A
  • stays out at night despite parental prohibitions, beginning before age 13 years.
  • Has run away from home overnight at least twice while living in parental or parental surrogate home, or once without returning for a lengthy period.
  • Is often truant from school, beginning before age 13 years
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11
Q

CD specifiers

A
  • childhood-onset: at least one sx is present before age 10
  • adolescent-onset: no sx were present before age 10
  • with limited prosocial emotions: individual must have displayed at least 2 of the following characteristics persistently over at least 12 months and in multiple relationships and settings. These characteristics reflect the individual’s typical pattern of interpersonal and emotional functioning over this period and not just occasional occurrences in some situations. Thus, to assess the criteria for the specifier, multiple information sources are necessary. In addition to the individual’s self-report, it is necessary to consider reports by others who have known the individual for extended periods of time
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12
Q

CD with limited prosocial emotions sx

A
  • at least 2 of the following present in the past 12 months in many interactions
  • lack of remorse or guilt: does not feel guilty when they do something wrong (excludes remorse only expressed when caught), general lack of concern about negative consequences of their actions
  • callous-lack of empathy: disregards/is unconcerned about the feelings of others, described as ‘cold and uncaring’, more concerned about the effects of their actions of themselves (even when they result in substantial harm to others)
  • unconcerned about performance: doesn’t show concern about poor/problematic performance at school/work/activities, doesn’t put in the effort required even when expectations are clear, often blames others for their poor performance
  • shallow/deficient affect: does not express feeling/show emotions to others except in ways that feel insincere, shallow, superficial (actions contradict emotions displayed, can turn emotions ‘on’ or ‘off’), or emotional expressions are used for gain (to manipulate/intimidate)
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13
Q

CD severity specifiers

A
  • mild: Few if any conduct problems in excess of those required to make the diagnosis are present, and conduct problems cause relatively minor harm to other (lying, truancy)
  • moderate: The number of conduct problems and the effect on others are intermediate between those specified in “mild” and those in “severe” (stealing, vandalism)
  • severe: Many conduct problems in excess of those required to make the diagnosis are present, or conduct problems cause considerable harm to others (forced sex, physical cruelty)
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14
Q

two dimensions of disruptive behaviour

A
  • overt-covert:
  • destructive-nondestructive
  • aggression is overt and destructive *more at risk for later bx problems
  • property violations are covert and destructive
  • status violations (truancy, substance use, runaway) are covert and nondestructive
  • oppositional bx (stubborn, touchy, argues) is overt and nondestructive
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15
Q

research about sibling fighting

A
  • very common, cannot be used to diagnose ODD
  • sibling conflict, hostility, and negativity predicts greater emotional and bx problems over time
  • can lead to maladaptive bx problems in other relationships
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16
Q

assessment of ODD

A
  • interviews and checklists
  • Disruptive Behaviour Diagnostic Observation Schedule: watching preschoolers interact with an interactive examiner, a busy examiner, with their parent (pressing for disruptive behaviour by testing their compliance, frustration, rule-breaking) - also used for CD
  • complementing a parent report
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17
Q

callous-unemotional (CU) traits

A
  • ‘with limited prosocial emotions’ specifier
  • 2-6% of kids with CD have CU traits - when they do = earlier onset, aggression is more severe and instrumental
  • CU associated with insensitivity to punishment (harder to treat)
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18
Q

instrumental aggression

A

using aggression to get something out of it, to get what you want

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19
Q

how to assess limited prosocial emotions

A
  • Clinical Assessment of Prosocial Emotions (CAPE1.1) semistructured interview
  • need multiple information sources
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20
Q

CD and ODD comorbidity

A
  • in DSM-IV, a more severe presentation of ODD was qualified as CD
  • in DSM-5, you can have both diagnoses at the same time
  • ODD tends to start presenting at age 6, CD around age 9 (ODD developmentally precedes CD, but not in all cases)
  • some kids will have ODD that never evolves into CD
  • some kids will be diagnosed with CD without ever having had an ODD diagnosis
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21
Q

prevalence rates ODD and CD

A
  • lifetime: ODD: 12%, CD: 8%
  • 6-month: ODD: 7.5%, CD: 1.3%
  • cultural and contextual differences
  • strongly associated with poverty, exposure to violence
  • if disruptive bx only occurs in a negative environment where it is adaptive/protective, it shouldn’t be diagnosed
  • only when disruptive bx occurs without negative environmental demands is it functionally impairing
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22
Q

social causation

A
  • stress of poverty leads to an increase in childhood psychopathology (strong exposure to stressors)
  • predicts more problem bx in low SES environments
23
Q

social selection

A
  • families with genetic predispositions drift down towards poverty
  • disruptive behaviours aren’t rewarded in our society (getting expelled, unable to hold a job)
  • predicts more problem bs in low SES environments
24
Q

Great Smoky Mountains study

A
  • longitudinal study of epidemiology of childhood disorders
  • positive association between pverty and disruptive bx
  • sample included many Indigenous youth living on a reservation
  • when a casino opened on the reservation, they gave the Indigenous families a stipend (more income which led to 4 groups: persistently poor, ex-poor, never poor, newly poor)
  • showed support for social causation theory (ex-poor kids reduced disruptive bx)
  • if social selection was true, the added income wouldn’t have had an impact on disruptive bx
  • full mediator: increased income = improved parental supervision = fewer disruptive bx problems
25
Q

gender differences in disruptive bx

A
  • conduct problems are 2-4x more common in boys
  • gender gap reduces in early teens
  • early-onset persistent CD: 10:1 ratio
  • adolescent-limited CD: 2:1 ratio
  • girls start to engage in more covert nonaggressive bx (lying, truancy)
26
Q

types of aggression in males/females

A
  • physical aggression is more common in boys than girls
  • relational aggression is more common than physical in girls
  • the gender difference in relational aggression is small and not meaningful (girls engage in slightly more relational)
  • boys disruptive bx is more overt = noticed earlier
27
Q

relational aggression

A

targeting social relationships

28
Q

comorbidities with ODD/CD

A
  • 35% of youth with ODD have ADHD
  • 50% of youth with CD have ADHD
  • 50% of youth with ODD/CD have depression or anxiety
29
Q

correlates of ODD/CD

A
  • cognitive/verbal challenges (not associated with intellectual impairment, may have specific verbal deficits)
  • academic functioning (underachievement, grade retention, dropout, suspension, expulsion, may lead to depression/anxiety in adulthood)
  • family functioning (high conflict, lack of family cohesion and emotional support)
  • peer problems (engage in aggression, likely to be rejected, form friendships with other antisocial peers which is associated with health risks like injury, substance abuse, STIs)
  • boys with conduct problems are 3-4x more likely to die before age 30 (more accidental deaths like overdoses)
  • relational aggression may be predictive of popularity with peers instead of aggression
30
Q

conduct problems in infants

A
  • difficult temperament
  • fussy, irritable, hard to soothe
  • higher in negative affectivity, lower in positive affectivity, lower in surgency
  • may be linked to later ODD in boys
31
Q

conduct problems in preschoolers

A
  • can be difficult to diagnose due to improbable symptoms (truancy, staying out at night) so need to adapt to a younger age group
  • noncompliance, temper loss (temper tantrums), aggression (kicking, biting) are common (aggression increases until 27 months then should level out)
  • low desisters: start with low misbehaviour, and misbehaviour decreases even more
  • moderate desisters: start with moderate misbehaviour, but decreases at age 11
  • high stable: lack of a normative decrease (higher risk for ODD and CD), significant behavioural and emotional dysregulation that will escalate if left untreated
32
Q

early-onset/life-course consistent pathway

A
  • at least 1 sx before age 10
  • 10:1 male to female
  • 50% persist into antisocial bx in adulthood
  • aggression in childhood
  • nonaggressive antisocial bx in middle childhood
  • serious delinquency in adolescence
  • diversification: adding more serious disruptive bx with age
33
Q

late-onset pathway/adolescent-limited

A
  • onset in adolescence, frequently with social change (peer influence)
  • 2:1 or 1:1 male to female
  • less extreme antisocial bx
  • less likely to commit violent offenses
  • less likely to persist into adulthood
  • snares: outcomes of antisocial bx that put people on problematic paths (unplanned pregnancy, dropping out of school, drug addiction) and could move you to the life-course pathway
34
Q

how do we distinguish typical misbehaviour from a problem, especially in preschoolers

A
  • frequency (and whether you can shape the behaviour with reinforcement)
  • severity
  • flexibility
  • predictability (is Bx occurring when expected i.e. when a situation is overwhelming for a child or is it unexpected and random)
  • pervasiveness (in many settings)
35
Q

heritability of disruptive disorders

A
  • adoption and twin studies: about 50%
  • but there are occasional cases in which behaviour seems to come out nowhere (no parent psychopathology, siblings are fine)
  • strongest biological evidence for early-onset pathway
36
Q

prenatal factors and birth complications

A
  • low birth weight
  • malnutrition (protein deficiency) during pregnancy
  • lead poisoning
  • mother’s use of nicotine, marijuana, alcohol during pregnancy
37
Q

genotype x maltreatment interaction

A
  • childhood maltreatment is a universal risk factor for psychopathology & most people don’t develop severe antisocial bx
  • low MAOA activity is linked to aggression (not metabolizing NTs like dopamine and norepinephrine) and a gene on the X chromosome
  • there’s a main effect of childhood maltreatment (it increases = so does antisocial)
  • no main effect of low/high MAOA activity
  • significant interaction effect: relationship between childhood maltreatment and antisocial bx is moderated by your level of MAOA activity (lower MAOA = higher antisocial), childhood activity produces an even bigger risk with this vulnerability
  • there are other types of negative parenting that also contribute to psychopathology, not just maltreatment
38
Q

coercion theory

A
  • cycle of increasingly negative parent-child interactions (delay/escape strategies and demands by the child + inconsistencies from parent are reinforcing to all)
  • adult makes a request = child reacts with hostility = parent withdraws request or becomes reactive/hostile = child doesn’t do what was asked
  • negative reinforcement: child learns that the parent’s demands are withdrawn when they throw tantrums so they don’t have to do what they don’t want to do
  • positive punishment: parent’s demands are constantly met with hostile behaviour (acts as the punishment) which decreases the likelihood of making more demands
39
Q

social information processing

A
  • various steps in going from perception of a situation to interpretation and action
  • encoding: what to pay attention to
  • interpretation: what does it mean
  • response search: options for actions
  • response decision: what will I do
  • enactment: how well did I do it
40
Q

social information processing deficits in kids with disruptive disorders

A
  • encoding: not much is known
  • interpretation: hostile attribution bias
  • response search: generate fewer responses overall, but more of them will be aggressive and less of them will be prosocial
  • response decision: outcome expectancy (believe they will get what they want) and self-efficacy (believe they will be good at implementing the aggressive response), they choose the aggressive option
  • enactment: not much is known (they’re selecting the aggressive options and doing them, but unclear if they’re actually good at them)
41
Q

hostile attribution bias

A

assuming negative intentions in neutral situations (impaired in the interpretation phase)

42
Q

how do social information processes become impaired

A
  • parents: mothers show the hostile attribution bias, parents may unintentionally or outwardly approve of aggressive behaviours (see aggression as an appropriate response to a peer provocation)
  • peers may be reinforcing (kids think aggression works, probably because it usually does and they get what they want)
43
Q

which levels in Bronfenbrenner’s model do various treatments target

A
  • PSST: microsystem (the individual)
  • PMT: agents within the microsystem (mesosystem)
  • MST: multiple levels
44
Q

Problem-Solving Skills Training (PSST)

A
  • targets cognitive processes upstream to change disruptive behaviour
  • underlying theory: social information processing
  • targets attentional biases (encoding), hostile attribution bias (interpretation), how well you generate and evaluate response options (response search and decision)
45
Q

STEPS for solving problems

A
  • PSST technique: train them to think of more solutions, how to examine them in role-playing/pros and cons, try new options even if you think they might not work (then kids get better results from using prosocial response which gets reinforced)
  • Say what the problem is
  • Think of solutions
  • Examine each one
  • Pick one and try it out
  • See if it works
46
Q

Anger coping program

A
  • focuses on cognitive biases
  • hostile attribution
  • distortion in perceptions of aggressiveness: kids underestimate how aggressive they are and overestimate how aggressive other people are
  • faulty emotional identification: tendency to mislabel any high arousal (like anxiety) as anger, which leads them to react accordingly - gain emotional insight to label appropriately
  • response search/selection: teaching to focus on verbal solutions instead of direct action (aggressive kids tend to think prosocial options aren’t likely to have good outcomes)
  • has some good evidence, but also critiqued
46
Q

steps for anger coping program

A
  • inhibit early angry and aggressive responses
  • cognitively re-label stimuli perceived as threatening (change hostile attribution)
  • solve problems by generating alternative coping responses and choosing non-aggressive responses instead
47
Q

critiques of PSST and anger coping

A
  • may not be enough because in the real world, problematic behaviours can be reinforced (outside the therapy setting)
  • these only target the individual, but there’s a whole system they go home to that may promote unhelpful behaviours
  • may need to intervene at other levels than the microsystem (like parents)
48
Q

Parent Management Training overview

A
  • gold standard
  • reset the parent-child relationship: create opportunities to start feeling good around each other (instead of constant frustration)
  • since parents tend to only react to negative behaviours and miss the positive - try to motivate the kids to get attention from positive bx (reinforce small behaviours then work your way up to the ideal)
  • may not be as effective in kids with CU traits
  • stronger effects for preschoolers and elementary-schoolers than adolescents (teens show more impairment and people besides parents are reinforcing behaviours)
49
Q

PMT principles

A
  • operant conditioning: consequences of a bx determine the likelihood of it re-occurring
  • education: help parents establish realistic expectations of their child’s behaviour (normative bx for kids that age), behaviour tends to get worse before it gets better when doing therapy
  • communication: give clear instructions to kids, setting clear and firm boundaries, set immediate and doable consequences for bad bx (there should be a rationale for punishment)
  • ABC model: change contingencies by modifying environments/antecedents, observe behaviours and their contexts, modify consequences
50
Q

controversy about time-outs

A
  • removal of positive reinforcement/negative punishment/omission training
  • 1min per year of age - highly recommended strategy
  • has been shown to decrease detrimental bx in youths despite the general outcry against them in media
  • robust lack of association between time-outs and adverse outcomes in short-term and long-term
  • emerging studies about positive effects on well-being
51
Q

Multisystemic Therapy

A
  • fit assessment: figure out what is driving the behaviour, which drivers/behaviours to target first
  • considers context in which bx is occurring to produce long-lasting change
  • integration of multiple evidence-based practices (because serious clinical problems arise from many interacting factors)
  • PSST, PMT, global reinforcement context (association with deviant peers)
  • intensive services: access to therapist 24/7, services in home and other settings, about 4 months of Tx
  • used with most severe cases (chronic juvenile offenders, violent bx, substance use)
52
Q

MST efficacy

A
  • difference is clinically significant in people’s lives: school performance, relationships, living skills (functional outcomes, not just statistical significance)
  • but mixed evidence for MST vs. other treatments (may not improve some functional outcomes like peer relations, academics but works for delinquency and family functioning)
  • strong theoretical basis for the therapy, but unclear if it’s working better than other Tx (could be because it’s only used in more severe cases)
53
Q

mediator in MST

A
  • family functioning drives the effects of MST