1 / 14

Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD)

Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD). Age-inappropriate, stubborn, hostile, and defiant behavior, including: losing temper arguing with adults active defiance or refusal to comply deliberately annoying others blaming others for mistakes or misbehavior being “touchy” or easily annoyed

Télécharger la présentation

Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD)

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. Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) • Age-inappropriate, stubborn, hostile, and defiant behavior, including: • losing temper • arguing with adults • active defiance or refusal to comply • deliberately annoying others • blaming others for mistakes or misbehavior • being “touchy” or easily annoyed • anger and resentfulness • spitefulness or vindictiveness

  2. Conduct Disorder (CD) • A repetitive and persistent pattern of violating basic rights of others and/or age-appropriate societal norms or rules, including: • aggression to people and animals (e.g., bullying, threatening, fighting, using a weapon) • destruction of property (e.g., deliberate fire setting) • deceitfulness or theft (e.g., “conning” others, shoplifting, breaking into others’ property) • serious violations of rules (e.g., running away, truancy, staying out at night withoutpermission)

  3. Characteristics of Conduct Disorder • Behavioral manifestations: • Aggression • Defiance • Dimensions • Severity • Frequency • Intensity • breadth

  4. Criteria for Conduct Disorder

  5. Costs to Society • Large – see overhead • Costs for one youth over a million dollars

  6. Etiology/Risk Factors • Biological – lots of ??s • Correlations are not well understood • Psychological/Personality Factors • Perceived hostility • Accepting of aggression • Problem solving • Early temperament & learning

  7. Etiology/Risk Factors cont’ • Parents/Socialization • Lack of attention and/or inconsistency • Peers • poverty • Environmental/Situational Factors • Alcohol or drug abuse • Access to weapons • crowds

  8. Stability of Disorder • Discipline problems • Breadth of problems • Predictors: • Age of onset • Breadth of deviance • Parent characteristics

  9. Prevalence & Gender Differences • Prevalence • 2%-6% for CD • 12% for ODD • Gender differences • in childhood, antisocial behavior 3-4 times more common in boys • differences decrease/disappear by age 15 • boys remain more violence-prone throughout lifespan; girls use more indirect and relational forms of aggression

  10. Developmental Course • Earliest sign usually difficult temperament in infancy • Two Pathways • life-course-persistent (LCP) path begins at an early age and persists into adulthood • adolescent-limited (AL) path begins around puberty and ends in young adulthood (more common and less serious than LCP) • Often negative adult outcomes, especially for those on the LCP path

  11. Parenting Factors • Coercion-escalation hypothesis • Why punishment does not work for families in this pattern of interaction

  12. Causes of Conduct Problems • Genetic Influences • biologically-based traits like difficult early temperament or hyperactivity-impulsivity may predispose certain children • adoption and twin studies support genetic contribution, especially for overt behaviors • different pathways reflect the interaction between genetic and environmental risk and protective factors

  13. Treatment • 3 empirically supported treatments • Parent management training • Problem solving skills training • Multi-systemic therapy Parent-child interaction therapy also promising Limited empirical support for wilderness programs and residential treatment

More Related