1 / 31

The adolescent cry Are we listening?

The adolescent cry Are we listening?. Prof. J.N.Sharma Department of Pediatrics Gauhati Medical College. Adolescence. A crucial period of life Is a confusion Adolescents Parents Care taker Neither a child nor an adult Transition difficult to detect

hua
Download Presentation

The adolescent cry Are we listening?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The adolescent cryAre we listening? Prof. J.N.Sharma Department of Pediatrics Gauhati Medical College

  2. Adolescence A crucial period of life Is a confusion • Adolescents • Parents • Care taker • Neither a child nor an adult • Transition difficult to detect • A complicated but useful lot of human resources

  3. Two most crucial period of lifeof Growth and development Under five period (Early childhood) • Somatic, • Brain and • lymphoid Adolescence • Somatic • Psychological • Reproductive and secondary sexual characteristics

  4. Adolescence What is adolescence? • Not clearly defined Beginning and End ? • Not clear Problems are peculiar • Health problems • Psychosocial problems Who will look after the adolescents? • Not yet decided

  5. Adolescence Period of life marking the end of childhood and setting the foundation for maturity, A critical period of development with manifestations at the biological, psychologicalandsocial levels of integration. Most complex part of development in human life.

  6. Adolescence • 20 % of population + 40% children = 60% • Achieve same degree of significance as early childhood • Development marked by significant interaction • Manifestations at biological, psychological and social levels

  7. Adolescence Onset and termination • Biological • Psychological • Social

  8. Onset and termination Biologically • The onset is signaled by the final phase of acceleration of growth and beginning of secondary sexual character. • Termination is marked by epiphyseal fusion and completion of sexual differentiation.

  9. Onset and termination Psychologically • It is marked by acceleration of cognitive growth and personality formation • Succeeded by the stage of parenthood and acquisition of an adult role.

  10. Onset and termination Socially • It is a period of intensified preparation for the assumption of an adult role • Termination is signaled when the person is accorded full adult prerogatives.

  11. Onset and termination To note • Physical development has a definite pattern and sequence • Psychological growth cannot be set in one pattern

  12. The adolescent age group Who are adolescents? • Boys between the age of 10 – 22 years • Girls between the age of 9 – 20 years What is the age of onset and end? • Boys: 10 – 12 yrs to 20 – 22 yrs. • Girls: 9 – 11 yrs to 18 – 20 yrs.

  13. Problems of adolescence • Health problems • Psychological problems • Social problems

  14. Problems of adolescence Health problems • Usually not reported: Nature of disease • If diagnosed therapy is not regular • Under treated by physicians • Do not come to pediatricians

  15. Common health problems • Malnutrition: PEM, Obesity • Anemia • Tuberculosis • Heart disease: hypertension, RHD • Acne • Accidents and injuries • STDs • Menstrual disorders

  16. Psychological development • Ability for abstract conceptualization • Search for a sense of personal identity • No longer a child , not an adult • Engages in determining who s/he is and what s/he is to become • Examines parents critically, lean more to peer groups.

  17. Psychological development • Search for identity is influenced by peer groups. • Constructive social group: meaningful society membership • Delinquent gang: antisocial personality • Sound parent relationship: firm and lasting relationship • Excessive dependence / hostility: failure of emancipation/ rejection of family

  18. Cross cultural evidence have shown that the conflict and distress experienced by adolescents reflect the cultural influences and expectations and are not caused by hormonal changes or physical growth pattern • Parents should guide at this juncture

  19. Psychosocial problems • More common than health problems • Peak age: late adolescence • Sex variation: equal but problems different • Urban / rural: same • Urban boys, rural girls: more problems

  20. Psychosocial problems Assessment is difficult • Variety • Difficult to differentiate between normal and abnormal • Minor problems go undetected • Major problems: Diagnosis is presumptive

  21. Psychological problems • Identity crisis • Depression • Suicide • Substance abuse • Sleep disorders • Anorexia nervosa

  22. Social problems Contributing factors • Poor socioeconomic status • No opportunity for education • Mass media exposure to violence, corruption and fundamentalism Leads to Loss of social perspectives

  23. Social problems • Child labour • Prostitution • Nonaccidental injuries • Illegitimate pregnancies • Vandalism • Violence • Sex crimes

  24. Care of adolescents Not yet properly decided Pediatricians? • WHO: Childhood upto 25 years • Upto 18 years in India: No infrastructure • No ward, No OPD • Rest 3 – 4 years left to general physicians

  25. Conclusions Adolescence • A phase of intense change • Problems multifarious • No infrastructure. No serious thought. • One cannot sit idle and ignore • Because

  26. Conclusions • It is very important to protect this important human resource • This is the time they are shown the right direction, given proper guidance to put them on the right path without hurting their ego.

  27. Conclusions • The parents at home, the teachers at school and the society at large should take the responsibility to transform children into adults. • They must be nurtured in an environment of dignity, love and affection, feeling of being wanted and educated inorder to grow into active, skilled and confident individuals who can take definitive and correct decision.

  28. Conclusions God could not make himself available to take care of each child He created. So he gave • Parents to take care and nurture, • Teacher for guidance and education and • Pediatrician for prevention and intervention programmes

  29. The adolescent’s cry

  30. Are we listening? Probably No Atleast not adequately

  31. Thank you

More Related