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Chapter 6 Conduct Problems Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Description of Conduct Problems  Conduct problems and antisocial behaviors describe ageinappropriate actions/attitudes that violate family expectations, societal norms, or personal or property rights of others  Diversity in disruptive/rule-violating behaviors ranges from annoying minor behaviors (e.g., temper tantrums) to serious antisocial behaviors (e.g., vandalism, theft, assault)  Consider many types, pathways, causes, and outcomes  Often associated with unfortunate family and neighborhood circumstances; circumstances do not excuse the behavior, but help us understand it Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Context, Costs, and Perspectives  Context  Antisocial behaviors appear and decline during “normal” development  they vary in severity, from minor disobedience to fighting  some antisocial behaviors decrease with age  some increase with age and opportunity  more common in boys in childhood, but the difference narrows in adolescence  children who are the most physically aggressive in early childhood maintain their relative standing over time Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Context, Costs, and Perspectives (cont.)  Social and Economic Costs  Conduct problems are the most costly mental health problem in North America  Early, persistent, extreme pattern of antisocial behavior occurs in about 5% of children; these children account for over 50% of crime in the U.S. and 30-50% of clinic referrals  20% of mental health expenditures in the U.S. are attributable to crime  Public costs across healthcare, juvenile justice, and educational systems are at least $10,000 per child  Lifetime cost to society per child who leaves high school for life of crime/substance abuse: about $2 million Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Context, Costs, and Perspectives (cont.)  Perspectives  Legal  Juvenile delinquency: children who have broken a law  Legal definitions result from apprehension and court contact, so they exclude antisocial behaviors of very young children occurring in home or school  Minimum age of responsibility is 12 in most states and provinces  Only a subgroup of children meeting legal definition of delinquency also meet definition of a mental disorder Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Context, Costs, and Perspectives (cont.)  Perspectives (cont.)  Psychological  Conduct problems seen as falling on a continuous dimension of externalizing behavior  1 or more SD above the mean: conduct problems  Externalizing behavior consisting of related but independent subdimensions:  “rule-breaking behavior”  “aggressive behavior”  overt-covert dimension  destructive-nondestructive dimension Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Context, Costs, and Perspectives (cont.)  Psychiatric  Conduct problems viewed as distinct mental disorders based on DSM symptoms  In the DSM-IV-TR, conduct problems are described as persistent patterns of antisocial behavior, represented by categories of oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) and conduct disorder (CD)  Public Health  Blends the legal, psychological, and psychiatric perspectives with public health concepts of prevention and intervention  Goal: reduce injuries, deaths, personal suffering, and economic costs associated with youth violence  Cuts across disciplines Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning DSM-IV-TR: Defining Features  Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD)  Age-inappropriate, stubborn, hostile, and defiant behaviors  Usually appears by age 8  Many behaviors (e.g., temper tantrums) are common in young children, severe/age-inappropriate ODD behaviors can have extremely negative effects on parent-child interactions  75% of clinic-referred preschoolers from low-income families meet DSM criteria for ODD  These children are at high risk for developing secondary mood, anxiety, impulse-control disorders Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning DSM-IV-TR: Defining Features (cont.)  Conduct Disorder (CD)  Repetitive, persistent pattern of severe aggressive and antisocial acts that involve inflicting pain on others or interfering with rights of others through physical/verbal aggression, stealing, or acts of vandalism  severe antisocial behaviors  may have co-occurring problems: ADHD, academic deficiencies, poor peer relations  family child-rearing practices may contribute  parents feel the children are out of control and feel helpless to do anything about it Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning DSM-IV-TR: Defining Features (cont.)  Conduct Disorder (cont.)  Age of onset: Childhood-onset versus adolescent-onset CD  Children with childhood-onset CD display at least one symptom before age 10  more likely to be boys  more aggressive symptoms  account for disproportionate amount of illegal activity  persist in antisocial behavior over time  Children with adolescent-onset CD  are as likely to be girls as boys  do not show the severity or psychopathology of the earlyonset group  less likely to commit violent offenses or persist in their antisocial behavior over time Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning DSM-IV-TR: Defining Features (cont.)  Conduct Disorder (cont.)  CD and ODD have much overlap of symptoms  Although most cases of CD are preceded by ODD, and most children with CD continue to display ODD symptoms, most children with ODD do not progress to more severe CD Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning DSM-IV-TR: Defining Features (cont.)  Conduct Disorder (cont.)  CD and Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD)      APD: pervasive pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others; involvement in multiple illegal behaviors As many as 40% of children with CD later develop APD Adults with APD may display psychopathy: a pattern of callous, manipulative, deceitful, remorseless behavior Signs of lack of conscience occur in some children as young as 3-5 years Subgroup of children with CD are at risk for extreme antisocial and aggressive acts; display callous and unemotional interpersonal style Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Associated Characteristics  Cognitive and Verbal Deficits  Although most children with conduct problems have normal IQ, they score nearly 8 points lower than peers  Greater deficit for children with childhood-onset  Verbal IQ consistently lower than performance IQ  Deficits present before conduct problems and may increase risk  Deficits in executive functioning related to failure to consider future implications of their behavior and its impact on others  may be due to co-occurring ADHD Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Associated Characteristics (cont.)  School and learning problems  Underachievement, grade retention, special education placement, dropout, suspension, and expulsion  Common factor (e.g., neuropsychological, language deficit, socioeconomic disadvantage) may underlie both conduct problems and school difficulties  Early language deficits may cause communication difficulties, which may increase conduct problems in school  Relationship between conduct problems and underachievement is firmly established by adolescence Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Associated Characteristics (cont.)  Self-Esteem Deficits  Low self-esteem is not the primary cause of conduct problems  Instead, problems are related to inflated and unstable, and/or tentative view of self Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Associated Characteristics (cont.)  Peer problems  Verbal and physical aggression toward peers; poor social skills  Often rejected by peers although some are popular  children rejected in primary grades are 5 times more likely to display conduct problems as teens  some become bullies  often form friendships with other antisocial peers  underestimate own aggression, overestimate others’ aggression toward them;  reactive-aggressive children display hostile attributional bias: attribute negative intent to others  proactive-aggressive view their aggressive actions as positive Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Associated Characteristics (cont.)  Family Problems  General family disturbances (e.g., parental mental health problems, family history of antisocial behavior, marital discord, etc.)  Specific disturbances in parenting practices and family functioning (e.g., excessive use of harsh discipline, lack of supervision, lack of emotional support/involvement, etc.)  High levels of conflict in the family, especially between siblings  Lack of family cohesion and emotional support  Deficient parenting practices  Parental social-cognitive deficits Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Associated Characteristics (cont.)  Health-Related Problems  High risk for personal injury, illness, drug overdose, sexually transmitted diseases, substance abuse, and physical problems as adults  Rates of premature death 3-4 times higher in boys with conduct problems  Early onset of sexual activity, higher sex-related risks  Illicit drug use associated with antisocial and delinquent behavior  Conduct problems in childhood are a risk factor for adolescent and adult substance abuse Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Accompanying Disorders and Symptoms  Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)  About 50% of children with CD also have ADHD  Possible reasons: common underlying factors, ADHD may be a catalyst for CD, or ADHD may lead to childhood onset of CD  Depression and Anxiety  About 50% of children with conduct problems also have a diagnosis of depression or anxiety  Poor adult outcomes for boys with combined conduct and internalizing problems  Girls with CD develop depressive or anxiety disorder by early adulthood  Males and females: increasing severity of antisocial behavior is associated with increasing severity of depression and anxiety  Anxiety may serve as protective factor to inhibit aggression Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Prevalence, Gender, and Course   Prevalence  ODD more prevalent than CD during childhood; by adolescence prevalence is equal  Lifetime prevalence rates  10% for ODD (11% for males, 9% for females)  9% for CD (12% for males, 7% for females) Gender differences are evident by 2-3 years of age  2-4 times more common in boys; boys have earlier age of onset  Gender disparity increases through middle childhood, narrows in early adolescence, and increases again in late adolescence, when male delinquent behavior peaks  Early symptoms for boys are aggression and theft; early symptoms for girls are sexual misbehaviors  Boys remain more violence-prone  Sex differences in antisocial behavior have decreased by more than 50% over the past 50 years Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Prevalence, Gender, and Course (cont.)  Explaining Gender Differences  Possible explanations: genetic, neurobiological, environmental risk factors, definitions of conduct problems to include physical violence  girls tend to use indirect, relational forms of aggression  Clinically referred girls and boys are comparable in externalizing behavior; referred girls are more deviant than boys in relation to same-age, same-sex peers  girls’ behavior is more covert  Some girls with CD have early menarche Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Prevalence, Gender, and Course (cont.)  Developmental Course and Pathways  General Progression  Earliest sign: usually difficult temperament in infancy  Hyperactivity (possibly from neurodevelopmental impairments)  Oppositional/aggressive behaviors that peak during preschool years  Diversification: new forms of antisocial behavior develop over time  Across cultures, more frequent during adolescence  About 50% of children with early conduct problems improve; some don’t display problems until adolescence; some display persistent low-level antisocial behavior from childhood/adolescence through adulthood Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Prevalence, Gender, and Course (cont.)  Developmental Course and Pathways (cont.)  Two Common Pathways across cultures  Life-course-persistent (LCP) path begins early and persists into adulthood; antisocial behavior begins early because neuropsychological deficits heighten vulnerability to antisocial environments in social environment  Complete, spontaneous recovery is rare after adolescence  family history of externalizing disorders  Adolescent-limited (AL) path begins around puberty and ends in young adulthood (more common and less serious than LCP)  50% decrease by early 20s, 85% decrease by late 20s  Negative adult outcomes, especially for those on the LCP path  Male: criminal behavior, work problems, substance abuse  Females: depression, suicide, health problems Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Causes  Historically viewed as result of inborn characteristics or learned through poor socialization practices  Early theories focused on child’s aggression and considered one primary cause  Today conduct problems are seen as resulting from the interplay among predisposing child, family, community, and cultural factors operating in a transactional fashion over time Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Causes (cont.)  Genetic Influences  Aggressive and antisocial behavior in humans is universal  Adoption and twin studies: 50% or more of variance in antisocial behavior is hereditary, with contribution higher for children with LCP versus AL pattern and for those with callous-unemotional traits  Adoption and twin studies suggest contribution of genetic and environmental factors  Genetic factors:  difficult temperament, impulsivity, tendency to seek rewards, and insensitivity to punishment may create antisocial “propensity”  may increase likelihood for child’s exposure to environmental risk factors  genotype may moderate susceptibility to environmental insults  Different pathways reflect the interaction between genetic and environmental risk and protective factors Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Causes (cont.)  Prenatal Factors and Birth Complications  Pregnancy and birth factors  low birthweight  malnutrition (possible protein deficiency) during pregnancy  lead poisoning  mother’s use of nicotine, marijuana, other substances during pregnancy  maternal alcohol use during pregnancy  no direct biological link between biological factors and conduct problems Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Causes (cont.)  Neurobiological factors  Overactive behavioral activation system (BAS) and underactive behavioral inhibition system (BIS)  Variations in stress-regulating mechanisms (e.g., hypothalamic-pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis and autonomic nervous system (ANS), serotonergic functioning, and structural and functional deficits in prefrontal cortex)  Those with early-onset CD show low psychophysiological/ cortical arousal, and low reactivity of ANS, which may lead to diminished avoidance learning so that punishment may increase, rather than decrease, antisocial behavior  Low levels of cortical arousal/low autonomic reactivity  Neural, endocrine, psychophysiological influences interact with negative environmental circumstances Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Causes (cont.)  Social-Cognitive Factors  Immature forms of thinking (e.g., egocentrism and lack of perspective taking)  Cognitive deficiencies (e.g., inability to use verbal mediators to regulate behavior)  Cognitive distortions (e.g., interpreting neutral events as hostile)  Dodge and Pettit: comprehensive social-cognitive framework model involving cognitive and emotional processes as mediators Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Causes (cont.)  Family Factors  Combination of child risk factors and extreme deficits in family management skills are associated with persistent/severe forms of antisocial behavior  Influence of family environment (e.g., physical abuse, marital conflict) on child moderated by several factors; child’s genotype moderates the link between maltreatment and antisocial behavior  Reciprocal influence: child’s behavior is influenced by and influences the behavior of others  Coercion theory: through a 4-step, escape-conditioning sequence, the child learns to use increasingly intense forms of noxious behavior to avoid unwanted parental demands Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Causes (cont.)  Family Factors (cont.)  In children with callous-unemotional traits, CD persists regardless of parenting quality  Insecure parent-child attachments  Family instability and stress  High family stress may be both a cause and an outcome of child’s antisocial behavior  Childhood-onset CD (not adolescent-onset CD) related to unemployment, low SES (poverty), multiple family transitions  Amplifier hypothesis: stress amplifies parents’ maladaptive predispositions  Parental criminality and psychopathology Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Causes (cont.)  Societal Influences  Individual/family factors interact with larger societal/cultural context  Social disorganization: community structures impact family processes that affect child adjustment  Adverse contextual factors associated with poor parenting  Neighborhood and school: antisocial behavior in youth is more common in neighborhoods with criminal subcultures  social selection hypothesis  Media: correlation between media violence and antisocial behavior Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Causes (cont.)  Cultural Factors  Across cultures, socialization of children for aggression is one of the strongest predictors of aggressive acts  Rates of antisocial behavior vary widely across and within cultures  Antisocial behavior is associated with minority status in the U.S., but this is likely due to low SES Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Treatment and Prevention • Typically, treatment begins when severe antisocial behavior at school leads to referral, although it may begin sooner • The most promising treatment uses a combination of approaches across many settings • Some treatments are not very effective: • office-based individual counseling and family therapy • group treatments can worsen the problem • restrictive approaches (residential treatment, inpatient hospitalization, incarceration) • Comprehensive two-pronged approach includes: • early intervention/prevention programs • ongoing interventions Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Treatment and Prevention (cont.) • Interventions with some empirical support for success:  Parent management training (PMT) (effective for children under 12)  minimal or no direct intervention by therapist  parents learn to change parent-child interactions, promote positive behavior, decrease antisocial behavior  parents learn to identify, define, observe child’s problem behaviors  treatment sessions cover use of commands, rules, praise, rewards, mild punishment, negotiation, contingency contracting  parents see/practice techniques  homework helps generalize skills  progress is monitored/adjusted as needed Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Treatment and Prevention (cont.)  Problem-Solving Skills Training (PSST)  Focuses on cognitive deficiencies and distortions in interpersonal situations  Used along and in combination with PMT, as necessary  Underlying assumption: the child’s perceptions and appraisals of environmental events trigger aggressive and antisocial responses; changes in faulty thinking lead to changes in behavior  Therapist uses instruction, practice, and feedback  Children learn to appraise the situation, identify selfstatements and reactions, alter their attributions about others’ motivations, and learn to be more sensitive to others Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Treatment and Prevention (cont.)  Multisystemic Treatment (MST)  Intensive family- and community-based approach for adolescents with severe conduct problems who are at risk for out-of-home placement  Sees adolescents as functioning within interconnected social systems  Antisocial behavior results from/is maintained by transactions within or between any of the systems  Attempts to empower caregivers to improve youth and family functioning  Effective in reducing long-term rates of criminal behavior in part by decreasing association with deviant peers Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Treatment and Prevention (cont.)  Preventive Interventions  Recognition that intensive home- and school-based interventions help overcome negative developmental history, poor family/community environment, and deviant peer associations  Main assumptions:  problems treated more easily/effectively in younger than older children  counteracting risk factors/strengthening protective factors at young age limits/prevents escalation of problem behaviors  reduces costs to educational, criminal justice, health, and mental health systems  Fast Track: program to prevent problems in high-risk children Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning Treatment and Prevention (cont.)  Conclusion: The degree of success or failure in treating antisocial behavior depends on the type and severity of the child’s conduct problem and related risk and protective factors Mash/Wolfe Abnormal Child Psychology, 4th edition © 2009 Cengage Learning