• Behavior Issues

    Published on 08-27-2010 12:29 PM
    Categories:
    1. Behavior Issues

    Inline Image What Is It About 20-Somethings? - New York Times

    This question pops up everywhere, underlying concerns about “failure to launch” and “boomerang kids.” Two new sitcoms feature grown children moving back in with their parents — “$#*! My Dad Says,” starring William Shatner as a divorced curmudgeon whose 20-something son can’t make it on his own as a blogger, and “Big Lake,” in which a financial whiz kid loses his Wall Street job and moves back home to rural Pennsylvania. A cover of The New Yorker last spring picked up on the zeitgeist: a young man hangs up his new Ph.D. in his boyhood bedroom, the cardboard box at his feet signaling his plans to move back home now that he’s officially overqualified for a job. In the doorway stand his parents, their expressions a mix of resignation, worry, annoyance and perplexity: how exactly did this happen?

    It’s happening all over, in all sorts of families, not just young people moving back home but also young people taking longer to reach adulthood overall. It’s a development that predates the current economic doldrums, and no one knows yet what the impact will be — on the prospects of the young men and women; on the parents on whom so many of them depend; on society, built on the expectation of an orderly progression in which kids finish school, grow up, start careers, make a family and eventually retire to live on pensions supported by the next crop of kids who finish school, grow up, start careers, make a family and on and on. The traditional cycle seems to have gone off course, as young people remain un­tethered to romantic partners or to permanent homes, going back to school for lack of better options, traveling, avoiding commitments, competing ferociously for unpaid internships or temporary (and often grueling) Teach for America jobs, forestalling the beginning of adult life.
    Published on 08-05-2010 08:26 AM
    Categories:
    1. Mental Health
    2. Behavior Issues

    Inline Image 'Keeping my son out of trouble' - BBC

    Denise was "at the end of her tether". Her teenage son was in and out of trouble, stealing mopeds, refusing to go to school and hanging out with gangs.

    Denise says a family-based therapy known as Multisystemic Therapy (MST), gave them a much needed second chance.

    Multisystemic Therapy revolves around improving parenting, increasing education and training, reducing offending behaviour, and tackling underlying health or mental health problems including substance misuse.

    Statistics show that one in 10 children aged five to 16 has a mental health disorder. Conduct disorder, which Joshua has, is the most common disorder in boys.
    Published on 07-12-2010 09:16 PM
    Categories:
    1. Behavior Issues

    Inline Image Accepting That Good Parents May Plant Bad Seeds - New York Times

    For years, mental health professionals were trained to see children as mere products of their environment who were intrinsically good until influenced otherwise; where there is chronic bad behavior, there must be a bad parent behind it.

    But while I do not mean to let bad parents off the hook — sadly, there are all too many of them, from malignant to merely apathetic — the fact remains that perfectly decent parents can produce toxic children.

    For better or worse, parents have limited power to influence their children. That is why they should not be so fast to take all the blame — or credit — for everything that their children become.
    Published on 07-12-2010 08:50 AM
    Categories:
    1. Mental Health
    2. Behavior Issues

    Inline Image Teenage anti-social behaviour caused by 'brain abnormality' - Daily Mail

    Antisocial behaviour in teenagers may be due to brain abnormalities that cause them to be aggressive, according to a new study.

    Scientists have discovered that teens with a psychiatric condition known as ‘conduct disorder’ have an abnormal pattern of brain activity compared with those without the condition.

    Conduct disorder leads to a high level of aggressive and antisocial behaviour and affects five teenagers in every 100 in the UK.
    Published on 06-22-2010 09:45 AM
    Categories:
    1. Behavior Issues

    Inline Image When the Adopted Can't Adapt - Time

    For a generation, American adoptive parents of these children have coped, suffered and in some instances given up hope in relative obscurity, silenced by a popular adoption culture preaching that love can heal all in "forever families" — a term used to describe families formed via adoption.

    The Massis are, by their own account, an imperfect unit, propelled forward by report cards and movie nights but held back by destructive patterns and behaviors that Marianne and Ray never expected when they decided to start a family through international adoption.

    Among those who have adopted school-age orphans from Russia, the Massis' experience is not atypical. For a host of reasons, children adopted from that country — some 58,000 in the past two decades — tend to be older and more likely to arrive in the U.S. developmentally behind their American peers and in many cases reeling from the effects of substandard orphanage care and trauma suffered at the hands of their biological parents or fellow orphans.
    Published on 06-07-2010 04:51 PM
    Categories:
    1. ADHD/ADD
    2. Substance Abuse
    3. Behavior Issues

    Inline Image Combination of Conduct Disorder and ADHD Predictive of Substance Abuse - Medscape
    In a 10-year follow-up study of children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), the occurrence of substance use disorder (SUD) was increased compared with controls, especially among ADHD youth with early conduct disorder, according to a study from Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston.

    The study was presented here at the American Psychiatric Association (APA) 2010 Annual Meeting.

    ADHD and associated comorbidity are known to be risk factors for substance abuse in adolescence and young adulthood, but few studies have examined the early childhood risk factors that may predispose patients to this behavior, said Timothy E. Wilens, MD, and colleagues from the Pediatric Psychopharmacology Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital.
    Published on 05-25-2010 07:19 AM
    Categories:
    1. Health and Nutrition
    2. Behavior Issues

    Inline Image Chemical Levels In Boys During Puberty May Cause Antisocial Behavior - Better Health Research

    Researchers have conducted what they say is the first study ever to observe the association between adolescent boys going through puberty and the levels of chemicals they produce that can cause antisocial behavior.

    According to a study in the May issue of Psychoneuroendocrinology, a team of researchers found lower levels of a chemical called alpha amylase in boys experiencing early maturity and higher levels of cortisol in boys who went through puberty later in their youth. These chemical levels seemed to be both associated with stress and antisocial behavior.
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