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Evidence-Based Psychosocial Treatment of Disruptive Behavior Disorders – Practice Elements

Evidence-Based Psychosocial Treatment of Disruptive Behavior Disorders – Practice Elements.

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Evidence-Based Psychosocial Treatment of Disruptive Behavior Disorders – Practice Elements

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  1. Evidence-Based Psychosocial Treatment of Disruptive Behavior Disorders – Practice Elements Developed by the Center for School Mental Health with support provided in part from grant 1R01MH71015-01A1 from the National Institute of Mental Health and Project # U45 MC00174 from the Office of Adolescent Health, Maternal, and Child Health Bureau, Health Resources and Services Administration, Department of Health and Human Services

  2. Disruptive Behavior Disorder: Practice Components

  3. Specific interventions to help the DBD student • Parent praise • Commands/limit setting • Tangible rewards • Response cost • Parent monitoring • Time out • Psycho-education with parent • Problem solving

  4. Parent praise • Training parents to praise correctly increases compliance in youth with Disruptive Behavior Disorders • Praise can include • Verbal praise, Encouragement • Attention • Affection • Physical proximity

  5. Giving effective praise • Be honest, not overly flattering • Be specific • No “back-handed compliments” (i.e., “I like the way you are playing quietly, why can’t you do this while I’m on the phone?”) • Give praise immediately

  6. Training parents to praise children • Barkley manual, Step 2 (Defiant Children) • Teach parents to set up “special time” to pay attention to their child during play • Teach parents to narrate their child’s play • Teach parents not to ask questions nor give any commands • Teach parents to ignore misbehavior during this playtime • Teach parents how to praise and praise lavishly during this time

  7. Training parents to praise teens • Barkley manual, Step 3 (Defiant Teens) • Encourage parents to set aside 15 minutes a few times a week to pay attention to their adolescent • Teach parents to pay attention to what their teen is doing, and show interest in a relaxed way • Teach parents not to ask questions nor give any instructions • Teach parents to ignore if the teenager reacts with sarcasm, coolness or suspicion • Teach parents to praise well and often

  8. Improving commands/limit setting • Training for parents and teachers to give commands in the most effective way • Effective commands increase compliance in children and adolescents with Disruptive Behavior Disorders (and in others, too!)

  9. Improving commands/limit setting with children • Barkley Step 3 (Defiant Children) • Teach parents and teachers: • To only give commands that they intend to back up with consequences (positive and negative) • Not to present commands as questions or favors • Not give too many commands at once

  10. Improving commands/limit setting with children • Teach parents and teachers: • To make eye contact with the child before giving command • To reduce other distractions while giving commands • To ask the child to repeat the command • To watch the child for one minute after giving the command to ensure compliance • To immediately praise child when s/he starts to comply

  11. Improving commands/limit setting with adolescents • Barkley, Defiant Teens, Step 4 • Teach parents and teachers: • To consider the intent of their command • Do they have the time/energy to follow through? • Do they have consequences for noncompliance? • To avoid ambiguity when issuing commands • To not respond to compliance with gratitude

  12. Improving commands/limit setting with adolescents • Teach parents and teachers: • To praise teens for appropriate behavior • To tell teen what to do, rather than what not to do • To eliminate other distractions while giving commands • To break down multi-step commands • To use aids for commands that involve time

  13. Tangible rewards • Children and adolescents with Disruptive Behavior Disorders do not respond to natural (intrinsic) rewards as well as typical youth • The training of parents and teachers in the use of tangible rewards is effective in increasing desired behaviors • Can use token systems, behavior charts, or immediate rewards

  14. Setting up a reward system for children at home • Barkley, Defiant Children, Step 4 • Determine family’s readiness to implement • Tailor the program to family’s ability-simplify it for overwhelmed or stressed families • Use poker chip system with younger children (4-7), point system with older children (8 and up)

  15. Setting up a reward system for children at home • Set a positive tone for the program • “We are going to make sure that you get rewarded for all of the good stuff you do at home” • Parent(s) buys chips and makes a bank, or sets up a chart or notebook for tracking points • The parent(s) and child together (with your help) make up a list of 10-15 rewards • There should be everyday rewards, like TV or computer time, and longer term rewards, like going to a movie or earning a new video game)

  16. Setting up a reward system for children at home • Help the parent(s) and child make a list of jobs or problem areas • Determine how much each is worth • Add up how much the child might earn in a day • Harder jobs should earn more • Bigger rewards should cost more • Make sure the child has some success in the beginning

  17. Setting up a reward system for children at home • Discuss the concept of bonus chips to reward helpful or other positive behaviors, even if they aren’t on the list • Chips and points are only given if the child complies after the first command • Don’t take away chips or points (response cost) in the beginning • All caregivers should use the same system • Remind parents to praise while giving the points

  18. Setting up a reward system for children at school • Barkley, Defiant Children, Step 8, Daily School Report Card • The teacher tracks the child’s behavior and reports it to the parent daily, who rewards the child • Pretty easy for the teacher • This is particularly effective because both the parent and teacher are involved • If the parent can’t be involved, the rewards may be given at school

  19. Setting up a reward system for children at school • Choose a few target behaviors at school • Choose one that the child will be successful with most of the time • Set up a system for school report card or school/home note system • See samples on page 244-246 • Pick from the targets given, or create your own with the blank samples

  20. Setting up a reward system for adolescents at home • Barkley, Defiant Teens, Step 5 • Use a point system (see previous slides) for 13/14 and under • Set up basically the same way as with children • Warn parents to expect resistance, their teen is used to getting all of their privileges for free! Make sure parents don’t give in. • Make sure parents only choose privileges they can control

  21. Setting up a reward system for adolescents at home • Barkley, Defiant Teens, Step 5 • Use a behavior contract for teens 14/15 and older • See sample contract on page 208 • Begin with only “do” behaviors (clean up room, set table, get ready for school on time) • “Don’t” behaviors are dealt with under response cost in next section

  22. Setting up a reward system for adolescents at school • Barkley, Defiant Teens, Step 9 • Establish a homework contract (see sample on page 121) • This can be adapted for other behavioral goals • Can also set up guidance counselor, tutor or peer as “coach” for organizational skills or other targets • Rewards for teen’s participation can be made part of the home contract, or part of a school reward system

  23. Response Cost • Using a point or token system in which negative behaviors result in the loss of points or tokens. • Training parents and teachers to use response cost is effective in reducing undesired behavior and noncompliance

  24. Response Cost with Children • Barkley, Defiant Children Step 4 & 8 • Train parents and teachers: • To develop list of undesirable behavior to be fined by reward system • To deduct points/chips for undesirable behavior • Parent and child have chosen to reduce whining • If child whines, parent deducts three points • Penalties increase based on severity of behavior

  25. Response Cost with Children • Train parents and teachers: • To avoid “punishment spiral” • When parent fines child for misbehavior, the child may respond with more misbehavior • Child continues to lose points, then loses motivation for the point system • Rule: Parent fines child once through point system, then sends child to time out if undesirable behavior continues

  26. Response Cost with Adolescents • Barkley, Defiant Teens Step 6 • To train parents and teachers: • To now use behavioral contract with the teen for “fines” • Teen agrees to not swear • If teen swears, teen loses Internet privilege

  27. Response Cost with Adolescents • Train parents and teachers: • To begin with 1 week “training period,” during which parents labels misbehavior every time it happens and warns of new fines • To avoid “punishment spiral” • When parent fines teen for misbehavior, the teen responds with more misbehavior • Teen continues to lose privileges, then loses motivation • Rule: Parent fines teen no more than twice, then directs teen to “cool off” away from the situation

  28. Response Cost with Adolescents • Encourage parents to act as “judge and jury” when teen lies • The teen should remain above suspicion • Response cost allows parents to discipline/educate instead of just punish • Emphasis of response cost is on • “Warm” – positive, loving • “Firm” – specific, immediate, and consistent

  29. Parent Monitoring • Give parents a structured way to monitor their child’s behavior • Measurement of the target behavior should be repeated • Can use either informal or formal measures

  30. Parent Monitoring • Informal measures • Daily homework log • Behavior chart as part of a reward system • Home Situations Checklist (Barkley, Defiant Children)

  31. Parent Monitoring • Formal measures • Vanderbilt Scales (from your Resource Toolkit or on the web) • Disruptive Behavior Disorders Scale (in Barkley or on the web)

  32. Time Out • Time out is the removal of a child or adolescent from all reinforcement for a specified period of time after a targeted misbehavior • It is an effective intervention, but only if it is used correctly and is not used too often

  33. Using Time Out with Children at Home • Barkley, Defiant Children, Step 5 • Teach parents to give an effective command (Step 3) • Teach parents to count out loud (initially) from 5 to 1 • Teach parents to give a time out warning if the child has not complied • After warning, count from 5 to 1 again

  34. Using Time Out with Children at Home • Teach parents to guide child to time out chair IMMEDIATELY • Teach parents to place the child in the chair “Stay there until I tell you to get up” • Teach parents not to argue or interact with the child in any way • Teach parents to not come back until the child is calm. Once the child is calm and the time is served, the child must correct the misbehavior

  35. Using Time Out with Children at Home • Teach the parents that the child should now go and comply with the previous command, or correct the misbehavior • Teach the parent to now praise compliance, and to praise the next behavior that the child does well

  36. Time Out Tips with Children • The first time out may be a killer • Prepare parents for a worst case scenarios • Reassure parents that this is not damaging their child • Make sure the time out area is away from anything interesting or fun • Remind parents not to “make up for” the time out (i.e., saving dessert for them)

  37. Using Time Out with Adolescents • Barkley, Defiant Teens, Step 8 • “Grounding” = “house arrest” • NO access to privileges (phone, TV, etc) • Parent must be home to enforce • Most effective with younger teens • May include “work detail” (cleaning out basement, scrubbing bathroom floor)

  38. Parent Psychoeducation • Engage and empower parents by teaching them about Disruptive Behavior Disorder • Establish relationship with parents as partner in treatment process • Look at how DBD influences parent-child interaction (bi-directional)

  39. Parent Psychoeducation • Review information about Disruptive Behavior Disorders • Symptoms • Causes • Diagnostic criteria • Treatment modalities

  40. Parent Psychoeducation • Emphasize caretaker role in development and treatment of DBD • Problems in parenting and parenting styles may make DBD worse • Establishing behavioral interventions at home or at school require caretaker involvement • Knowledge enables parents to more effectively advocate for better services

  41. Parent Psychoeducation • More effective if therapist devotes more than one session to psychoeducation • More effective if therapist educates parents about DBD across multiple settings (home, school, playground, etc)

  42. Resources for Parent Psychoeducation • Center for Children and Families • “Supporting Children with Challenging Behaviors: Relationships Are the Key ” • American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry • Fact sheets

  43. Resources for Parent Psychoeducation • National Initiative for Children’s Healthcare Quality • “How to Establish a School-Home Daily Report Card” • Vanderbilt Assessment Scales (parent and teacher version) • DBD Resources Available on the Internet • “Working with Your Child’s School”

  44. Differential reinforcement • Teach parents and teachers how and when to differentially reinforce desirable behavior • Step One: Ignore (stop reinforcing) the child’s undesirable behavior • Step Two: Reinforce the child’s desirable behavior in a systematic manner • The desirable behavior should be a behavior that is incompatible with the undesirable behavior

  45. Differential reinforcement • Define the behavior of concern (target) • Determine how often the target behavior occurs • Determine how often to reward the child for alternative behavior • Fixed interval – reward every X minutes • Determine how to reward the child for alternative behavior • Praise, attention, points or chips

  46. Reinforcement of target behavior • Target behavior: Interrupting • Alternative behavior: Playing by himself • Reward schedule: 5 minutes • If child goes 5 minutes without interrupting, the child receives reinforcement • If child interrupts before 5 minutes is up, the child does not receive reinforcement • Re-set schedule once child interrupts

  47. Problem solving • Teaches children how to “use their heads before using their fists” • Problem solving steps • Define the problem • Identify response options • Evaluate response options • Parents trained to help their children use problem solving steps

  48. Problem Solving • Extensive use of applied behavior analysis • Prompt appropriate behavior • Shape behavior • Deliver reinforcement for appropriate behavior • Extinguish inappropriate behavior

  49. Problem Solving • Central Goals of Problem Solving • Improve how children reason when confronted with interpersonal problems • Increase the number of prosocial solutions considered and employed

  50. Problem Solving Skills Training • Designed for aggressive and antisocial behavior • Children ages 7-13 • 20 sessions (40-45 minutes) • Individual sessions with parent contact

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