1 / 84

SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL, AND BEHAVIORAL FUNCTIONING OF CHILDREN EXPOSED TO MEDICAL TRAUMA: A THEORY OF HARDINESS

SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL, AND BEHAVIORAL FUNCTIONING OF CHILDREN EXPOSED TO MEDICAL TRAUMA: A THEORY OF HARDINESS. Robert B. Noll, Ph.D. Director, Child Development Unit Medical Director for Behavioral Health. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. Vannatta, Gerhardt, Sheeber, Zeller, Reiter-Purtill

ulla
Download Presentation

SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL, AND BEHAVIORAL FUNCTIONING OF CHILDREN EXPOSED TO MEDICAL TRAUMA: A THEORY OF HARDINESS

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. SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL, AND BEHAVIORAL FUNCTIONING OF CHILDREN EXPOSED TO MEDICAL TRAUMA: A THEORY OF HARDINESS Robert B. Noll, Ph.D. Director, Child Development Unit Medical Director for Behavioral Health

  2. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS • Vannatta, Gerhardt, Sheeber, Zeller, Reiter-Purtill • Staff--UC Friendship Study • Dahl, Szigethy, Rofey, Finder • National Institute of Health • American Cancer Society • National Arthritis Foundation

  3. RESEARCH RATIONALE • Improve clinical care • Theory – Stress and trauma

  4. STRESSFUL/TRAUMATIC LIFE EVENTS • Random versus non-random • Uncontrollable versus controllable GREATEST HARM • Uncontrollable, randomly occurring stressful/traumatic life events

  5. IMPACT ON CHILDREN • Social functioning • Emotional well being • Externalizing behavior (acting out)

  6. IMPACT ON PARENTS AND FAMILIES • Parental mental health • Child-rearing • Family functioning • Time management • Siblings • Economic issues

  7. STRESS / TRAUMA MODELEvolutionary Behavioral Health • Illness Parameters • Trauma to the CNS Childhood Chronic Illness Child Dysfunction • Family Parameters • Extreme Family Deprivation

  8. METHODOLOGY PROBLEMS • Comparison groups • Sampling • Contextual factors • Source of information • Lack of longitudinal data

  9. SELECTION CRITERIA FOR COMPARISONS • Classmate at school • Race • Gender • Closest date of birth

  10. FAMILY DEMOGRAPHIC VARIABLES • Family social prestige • Family income • Age of parents • Number of children living at home • Education of parents • Marital status

  11. CHILD DEMOGRAPHIC VARIABLES • Age • Gender • Race • IQ

  12. PRIMARY DIMENSIONS OF SOCIAL FUNCTIONING • What is the child like? • Is the child liked?

  13. REVISED CLASS PLAYWhat is the child like? • Popular/Leader • Prosocial • Aggressive/Disruptive • Sensitive/Isolated

  14. ILLNESS ROLES Someone who is sick a lot Someone who misses a lot of school Someone who is tired a lot

  15. SOCIAL ACCEPTANCE Is the child liked? Three Best Friends • Number of nominations • Reciprocated friendships Like Rating Scale • Overall social acceptance

  16. CHILDREN’S EMOTIONAL WELL-BEING CHILDREN’S REPORT (objective and projective) • depression/anxiety • loneliness • self concept PARENT’S REPORT • depression/anxiety

  17. EVALUATION OF CHILD FUNCTIONING • PERSPECTIVE OF MEDICAL CHART • PERSPECTIVE OF OTHERS • teachers • peers • parents (mothers and fathers) • PERSPECTIVE OF SELF • questionnaires • projectives

  18. DATA ANALYSIS • Comparison of group means • Disease severity • Age and gender as moderators

  19. GENERAL SELECTION CRITERIA • 8-15 years of age • No full time special education • Treated at CCHMC

  20. CHILDREN WITH CHRONIC ILLNESS • Neurofibromatosis (Type 1) • Cancer (no primary CNS involvement)

  21. NF1 • 72 identified (medical records) • 66 located and agreed to participate • 60 schools participated • 54 children with NF and 53 COMPs participate in home-based assessment

  22. NF1: DISEASE SEVERITY • Overall medical severity • Visibility/cosmetic involvement • Neurologic involvement

  23. RCP: TEACHER NOMINATIONS

  24. RCP ILLNESS ROLES: PEERS ***p < .001

  25. RCP: PEER NOMINATIONS

  26. SOCIAL ACCEPTANCE: NF1

  27. DEPRESSION AND LONELINESS

  28. SELF PERCEPTIONS

  29. SELF PERCEPTIONS

  30. MOTHER REPORTS ** *

  31. FATHER REPORTS

  32. DISEASE SEVERITY: NF1 OVERALL MEDICAL SEVERITY • Sick a lot (peers) • Attention (mothers and fathers) VISIBILITY/COSMETIC INVOLVEMENT • RA rating

  33. NEUROLOGIC DISEASE SEVERITY:PEER REPORTS • Social behavior • Popular-Leader [r = -.32] • Sensitive-Isolated [r = .28] • Social acceptance • Reciprocated friendships [r = -.28] • Like Ratings [r = -.32]

  34. NEUROLOGIC DISEASE SEVERITY: PARENT REPORTS • Externalizing symptoms (M & F) • Attention (M) • Rhythmicity (M & F)

  35. NEUROLOGIC DISEASE SEVERITY:CHILD REPORTS • Depression [r = .43] • Self concept: Behavior [r = .30]

  36. CONCLUSIONS: CHILDREN WITH NF • Social functioning • Emotional well being • Behavior (acting out) • DISEASE SEVERITY • Major role: Neurological severity

  37. SELECTION CRITERIA: CANCER • No primary CNS involvement • On chemotherapy • 11 months since diagnosis

  38. PRIMARY DISEASE leukemias lymphomas solid tumors # OF PATIENTS 34 21 17 DISEASE STATUS

  39. CHILDHOOD CANCER: ILLNESS SEVERITY • Protocols • Response to treatment

  40. RCP: TEACHER NOMINATIONS

  41. RCP ILLNESS ROLES: PEERS

  42. RCP: PEER NOMINATIONS

  43. SOCIAL ACCEPTANCE: CANCER

  44. SOCIAL ACCEPTANCE: NF1

  45. DEPRESSION AND LONELINESS

  46. SELF PERCEPTIONS

  47. SELF PERCEPTIONS

  48. MOTHER REPORTS

  49. FATHER REPORTS

  50. DISEASE SEVERITY: CANCER • Peer reports: Aggressive-Disruptive • Peer reports: Like Ratings • Teacher reports: Sensitive-Isolated

More Related