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© Cengage Learning 2016 © Cengage Learning 2016
Eric J. MashDavid A. Wolfe
Conduct Problems
9
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Age-inappropriate actions and attitudes that violate family expectations, societal norms, and personal or property rights of others
• These disruptive and rule-violating behaviors range from:– Annoying minor behaviors (e.g., temper
tantrums) to serious antisocial behaviors (e.g., vandalism, theft, and assault)
Description of Conduct Problems
© Cengage Learning 2016
• We must consider many types, pathways, causes, and outcomes of conduct problems
• Are associated with unfortunate family and neighborhood circumstances– Circumstances do not excuse the behavior,
but help us understand and prevent it
Description of Conduct Problems (cont’d.)
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• Antisocial behaviors appear and decline during normal development– Behaviors vary in severity, from minor
disobedience to fighting
– Some may decrease with age; others increase with age and opportunity
– Are more common in boys in childhood
– Children who are the most physically aggressive in early childhood maintain relative standing over time
Context
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Frequencies for Common Antisocial Behavior
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• Conduct problems are the most costly mental health problem in North America
• Early, persistent, and extreme antisocial behavior occurs in about 5% of children– These children account 50% of all crime in the
U.S. and approximately 30-50% of clinic referrals
– Annual public costs (healthcare, juvenile justice, and educational systems) are $10,000 per child
Social and Economic Costs
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• Juvenile delinquency
– Legal definitions exclude antisocial behaviors of very young children
– Including property crimes (e.g. vandalism, theft), violent crimes (robbery, aggravated assault, homicide)
– Minimum age of responsibility is 12 (in most states)
– Only a subgroup of children meeting legal definition of delinquency also meet definition of a mental disorder (needs to show persistent pattern)
Legal Perspectives
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• Conduct problems fall on a continuous dimension
– Externalizing dimension: Impulsive and overactive
• “Rule-breaking behavior”: running away, setting fires, stealing, dugs, vandalism, skipping school
• “Aggressive behavior” : Fighting , destructiveness, disobedience, defiance, threatening
– Overt (visible) –covert (hidden) dimension
– (Most children with CD display both)
– Destructive-nondestructive dimension
– Crossing the overt-covert with the destructive-nondestructive
• Yields four categories of conduct problems
Psychological Perspectives
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Four Categories of Conduct Problems
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Conduct problems are viewed as distinct mental disorders based on DSM symptoms– Disruptive behaviors are described as
persistent patterns of antisocial behavior– Represented by the categories of Conduct Disorder (CD) and
Oppositional Defiant Disorders (ODD)
• The diagnosis of antisocial personality disorder (APD) is relevant to understanding childhood conduct and their adult outcomes
Psychiatric Perspectives
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Blends the legal, psychological, and psychiatric perspectives with public health concepts of prevention and intervention– Goal
• To reduce injuries, deaths, personal suffering, and economic costs associated with youth violence
• Cut across disciplines to:– Understand conduct problems in youths
– Determine how these problems can be treated and prevented
Public Health Perspectives
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• Two DSM-5 disruptive behavior disorders– Oppositional defiant disorder (ODD)
– Conduct disorder (CD)
– Both have been found to predict future psychopathology and enduring impairment in life functioning
DSM-5 Defining Features
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• Age-inappropriate recurrent pattern of stubborn, hostile, disobedient, and defiant behaviors
• Usually appears by age 8
• Severe ODD behaviors can have negative effects on parent-child interactions
• Symptoms can be grouped into
• 1)Negative affect ( angry, irritable mood)
• 2) Defiance (defiant/strong-head behavior
Oppositional Defiant Disorder
© Cengage Learning 2016
Diagnostic criteria for Oppositional Defiant Disorder
© Cengage Learning 2016
Diagnostic criteria for Oppositional Defiant Disorder (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Repetitive, persistent pattern of severe aggressive and antisocial acts– May have co-occurring problems, e.g.,
ADHD, academic deficiencies, and poor peer relations
– Family child-rearing practices may contribute to problems
– Parents feel the children are out of control and feel helpless to do anything about it
Conduct Disorder
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Diagnostic Criteria for Conduct Disorder
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Diagnostic Criteria for Conduct Disorder (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
Diagnostic Criteria for Conduct Disorder (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Children with childhood-onset CD display at least one symptom before age 10– More likely to be boys
– Show more aggressive symptoms
– Account for disproportionate amount of illegal activity
– Persist in antisocial behavior over time
Conduct Disorder Age of Onset
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• Children with adolescent-onset CD– As likely to be girls as boys
– Do not show the severity or psychopathology characterizing the early-onset group
– Are less likely to commit violent offenses or persist in their antisocial behavior over time
Conduct Disorder Age of Onset (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Nearly half of all children with CD have no prior ODD diagnosis
• Most children who display ODD do not progress to more severe CD
• For most children, ODD:– Is an extreme developmental variation
– Is a strong risk factor for later ODD
– Does not signal an escalation to more serious conduct problems
Are CD and ODD Separate?
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Pervasive pattern of disregard for and violation of the rights of others; involvement in multiple illegal behaviors– As many as 40% of children with CD later
develop APD
– Adolescents with APD may display psychopathic features
– Signs of lack of conscience occur as young as 3-5 years
Antisocial Personality Disorder (ADP) and Psychopathic Features
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• A subgroup of children with CD are at risk for extreme antisocial and aggressive acts and for poor long-term outcomes– Display callous and unemotional (CU)
interpersonal style• Lack guilt and empathy; do not show emotions;
display narcissism and impulsivity; and lack behavioral inhibition
– Different developmental processes may underlie behavioral and emotional problems
Antisocial Personality Disorder (ADP) and Psychopathic Features (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Many factors are associated with conduct problems in youths– Cognitive and verbal deficits– School and learning problems– Self-esteem deficits– Peer problems– Family problems– Health-related problems
Associated Characteristics
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• Most children with conduct problems have normal intelligence
• Verbal deficits are present in early development: may interfere with self-control, emotional regulation, receptive listening, expressive speech
• Deficits in executive functioning– Co-occurring ADHD may be a factor
– Types of executive function exhibited may differ - cool : attention, working memory, planning and inhibition, (such as in ADHD) versus hot executive functions: involve incentive and motivation (more often in CD).
Cognitive and Verbal Deficits
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• Rarely consider the consequences of their behavior or the impact on others
• Fail to inhibit their impulsivity
• Fail to consider future rewards
• Fail to adapt their action to future circumstances
• May be related to the comorbidity with ADHD
Deficits in Executive Functions
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• Underachievement, grade retention, special education placement, dropout, suspension, and expulsion
• Relationship between conduct problems and underachievement is firmly established by adolescence– May lead to anxiety or depression in young
adulthood
School and Learning Problems
© Cengage Learning 2016
• General family disturbances
• Specific disturbances in parenting practices and family functioning
• High levels of conflict are common in the family, especially between siblings
• Lack of family cohesion and emotional support
• Deficient parenting practices
• Parental social-cognitive deficits
Family Problems
© Cengage Learning 2016
Peer Problems
• Young children with conduct problems display poor social skills and verbal and physical aggression toward peers
• Often rejected by peers, although some are popular– Children rejected in primary grades are five
times more likely to display conduct problems as teens
– Some become bullies
© Cengage Learning 2016
Peer Problems (cont’d.)
• Often form friendships with other antisocial peers– Predictive of conduct problems during
adolescence
• Underestimate own aggression and its negative impact, and overestimate others’ aggression toward them
© Cengage Learning 2016
Peer Problems (cont’d.)
• Reactive-aggressive children display hostile attributional bias
• Proactive-aggressive view their aggressive actions as positive
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Low self-esteem is not the primary cause of conduct problems– Instead, problems are related to inflated,
unstable, and/or tentative view of self
• Youths with conduct problems may experience high self-esteem– Over time may permit them to rationalize their
antisocial conduct
Self-Esteem Deficits
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• High risk for personal injury, illness, drug overdose, sexually transmitted diseases, substance abuse, and physical problems as adults
• Rates of premature death (before age 30)– Are 3 to 4 times higher in boys with conduct
problems
Health-Related Problems
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Early onset and persistence of sexual activity and sexual risk-taking by age 21
• Substance use disorders and adolescent antisocial behavior are strongly associated
• Childhood conduct problems are a risk factor for adolescent and adult substance abuse– Mediated by drug use and delinquency during
early and late adolescence
Health-Related Problems (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder– More than 50% of children with CD also have
ADHD
– Possible reasons for overlap • A shared predisposing vulnerability may lead to
both ADHD and CD
• ADHD may be a catalyst for CD
• ADHD may lead to childhood onset of CD
– Research suggests that CD and ADHD are distinct disorders
Accompanying Disorders and Symptoms
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• Depression and anxiety– About 50% of children with conduct problems
also have depression or anxiety• ODD best accounts for the connection between
conduct problems and depression
• Increasing severity of antisocial behavior is associated with increasing severity of depression and anxiety
• Anxiety may serve as a protective factor to inhibit aggression
Accompanying Disorders and Symptoms (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• ODD is more prevalent than CD during childhood; by adolescence, prevalence is equal
• Lifetime prevalence rates– 12% for ODD (13% for males, 11% for
females)
– 8% for CD (9% for males, 6% for females)
• Prevalence for CD and ODD across cultures of Western countries are similar
Prevalence
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• Gender differences are evident by 2-3 years of age– During childhood, rates of conduct problems
are about 2-4 times higher in boys
– Boys have earlier age of onset and greater persistence
– Early symptoms for boys are aggression and theft; early symptoms for girls are sexual misbehaviors
Gender
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Possible explanations– Genetic, neurobiological, environmental risk
factors, and definitions of conduct problems that emphasize physical violence
• Girls use indirect, relational forms of aggression
• Early maturing boys and girls are at risk for recruitment into delinquent behavior by peers
Explaining Gender Differences
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• Earliest sign is difficult temperament in infancy
• Hyperactivity and impulsivity during preschool ad early school years
• Oppositional and aggressive behaviors peak during preschool years
• Diversification - new forms of antisocial behavior develop over time
General Progression
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• Covert conduct problems begin during elementary school
• Problems become more frequent during adolescence
General Progression (cont’d.)
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• Some children break from the traditional progression– About 50% of children with early conduct
problems improve
– Some don’t display problems until adolescence
– Some display persistent low-level antisocial behavior from childhood/adolescence through adulthood
General Progression (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
Different Forms of Disruptive And Antisocial Behavior
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• Life-course-persistent (LCP) path begins early and persists into adulthood – Antisocial behavior begins early
• Subtle neuropsychological deficits heighten vulnerability to antisocial elements in social environment
– Complete, spontaneous recovery is rare after adolescence
– Associated with family history of externalizing disorders
Two Common Pathways
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• Adolescent-limited (AL) path begins at puberty and ends in young adulthood– Less extreme antisocial behavior, less likely to
drop out of school, and have stronger family ties
– Delinquent activity is often related to temporary situational factors, especially peer influences
Two Common Pathways (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
The Changing Prevalence Of Participation In Antisocial Behavior Across The Lifespan
© Cengage Learning 2016
• 50% of active offenders decrease by early 20s, and 85% decrease by late 20s
• Negative adult outcomes are seen, especially for those on the LCP path – Males - criminal behavior, work problems, and
substance abuse
– Females - depression, suicide, and health problems
Adult Outcomes
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Early theories focused on a child’s aggression
• No single theory explains all forms of antisocial behavior
• Today conduct problems are seen as resulting from:– The interplay among a predisposing child,
family, community, and cultural factors operating in a transactional fashion over time
Causes
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• Aggressive and antisocial behavior in humans is universal– Run in families within and across generations
• Adoption and twin studies– Indicate 50% or more of variance in antisocial
behavior is hereditary
– Suggest contribution of genetic and environmental factors
Genetic Influences
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• Pregnancy and birth factors– Low birth weight
– Malnutrition (possible protein deficiency) during pregnancy
– Lead poisoning
– Mother’s use of nicotine, marijuana, and other substances during pregnancy
– Maternal alcohol use during pregnancy
Prenatal Factors and Birth Complications
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Overactive behavioral activation system (BAS) and underactive behavioral inhibition system (BIS)
• Variations in stress-regulating mechanisms
• Structural and functional brain abnormalities in amygdala, prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate, and insula
Neurobiological Factors
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• Early findings suggest three neural systems are involved:– Subcortical neural systems
• Aggressive behavior - dysfunction in the integrated functioning of brain circuits involving the amygdala
– Prefrontal cortex • Decision-making circuits and socioemotional
information processing circuits
– Frontoparietal regions• Emotions and impulsive motivational urges
Neurobiological Factors (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Immature forms of thinking
• Cognitive deficiencies
• Cognitive distortions
• Deficits in facial expression recognition and eye contact
• Dodge and Pettit comprehensive social-cognitive framework model– Cognitive and emotional processes are
mediators
Social-Cognitive Factors
© Cengage Learning 2016
Steps In The Thinking And Behavior Of Aggressive Children In Social Situations
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Severe forms of antisocial behavior– Are associated with a combination of child risk
factors and extreme deficits in family management skills
• Influence of family environment is complex
• Reciprocal influence – Child’s behavior is influenced by and
influences the behavior of others • Child behaviors exert greater influence on
parenting behavior than the reverse
Family Factors
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Coercion theory – Parent-child interactions provide a training
ground for the development of antisocial behavior
– Four-step escape-conditioning sequence • The child learns to use increasingly intense forms
of noxious behavior to avoid unwanted parental demands (coercive parent-child interaction)
– Children with callous-unemotional traits display significant conduct problems regardless of parenting quality
Family Factors (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Attachment theories– Children with conduct problems have little
internalization of parent and societal standards
– There is a relationship between insecure attachments and the development of antisocial behavior
Family Factors (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Family instability and stress– High family stress may be both a cause and
an outcome of child’s antisocial behavior• Unemployment, low SES, multiple family
transitions, instability, and disruptions in parenting practices are stressors
– Amplifier hypothesis
• Parental criminality and psychopathology– Aggressive and antisocial tendencies run in
families within and across generations
Other Family Problems
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Individual and family factors interact with the larger societal and cultural context in determining conduct problems
• Social disorganization theories
• Adverse contextual factors are associated with poor parenting
• Neighborhood and school– Social selection hypothesis
• Media
Societal Factors
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Across cultures, socialization of children for aggression is one of the strongest predictors of aggressive acts
• Rates of antisocial behavior vary widely across and within cultures
• Antisocial behavior is associated with minority status in the U.S.– Likely due to low SES
Cultural Factors
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Some treatments are not very effective – Office-based individual counseling and family
therapy
– Group treatments can worsen the problem
– Restrictive approaches (residential treatment, inpatient hospitalization, incarceration)
Treatment and Prevention
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Comprehensive two-pronged approach includes – Early intervention/prevention programs
– Ongoing interventions
Treatment and Prevention (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
Effective Treatments For Children With Conduct Problems
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• Teaches parents to change the child’s behavior in the home and in other settings using contingency management techniques
• Focus is on:– Improving parent-child interactions
– Promoting positive behavior
– Decreasing antisocial behavior
• Makes numerous demands on parents
Parent Management Training (PMT)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Focuses on cognitive deficiencies and distortions in interpersonal situations
• Five problem-solving steps are used to:– Identify thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in
problem social situations
Problem-Solving Skills Training (PSST)
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• Children learn to:– Appraise the situation
– Identify self-statements and reactions
– Alter their attributions about others’ motivations
– Learn to be more sensitive to others
Problem-Solving Skills Training (PSST) (cont’d.)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Intensive family- and community-based approach– For teens with severe conduct problems who
are at risk for out-of-home placement
• Attempts to empower caregivers to improve youth and family functioning
• Effective in reducing long-term rates of criminal behavior – Reduces association with deviant peers
Multisystemic Therapy (MST)
© Cengage Learning 2016
• Main assumptions– Conduct problems can be treated more easily
and effectively in younger than older children
– Counteracting risk factors/strengthening protective factors at young age limits/prevents escalation of problem behaviors
– Costs to educational, criminal justice, health, and mental health systems are reduced
Preventive Interventions
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• Incredible Years intensive multifaceted early-intervention program for parents and teachers– Support for effectiveness of early
interventions in reducing later conduct problems and maintaining positive outcomes
• Fast Track program to prevent development of antisocial behavior in high-risk children, using five components
Preventive Interventions (cont’d.)
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