Clinical Developmental & Health Psychology – Lecture summary (UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM)
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There are different types of responses to increased anxiety:
Anxiety disorder includes an overactivation of the amygdala and other bodily, cognitive and behavioural reactions in the absence of danger.
The older children get, the higher the probability that they develop an anxiety disorder. The prevalence of anxiety disorders in the general population is 0.5% - 5%. The prevalence of anxiety symptoms (i.e. above-average anxiety symptoms) is 5% to 10% in children and young people. Girls typically have increased levels of anxiety disorders in adolescence compared to boys.
There are three types of children who do not go to school:
There are several signs to recognize anxiety in children and adolescents in clinical practice and school:
There is a lot of comorbidity in anxiety disorders with other anxiety disorders (1), depression (2), aggression (3) and school refusal (4).
There are several risk and protective factors for anxiety disorders:
Whether something is a risk or protective factor depends on the way the factor is present in a child’s life (e.g. low effortful control is a risk factor while high effortful control is a protective factor).
Behavioural inhibition refers to shyness and emotional reservation among unknown people and places and withdrawal from social events (i.e. observing rather than participating). Extreme social seclusion is associated with internalizing problems and a negative self-image if it persists in the long-term. It is possible that effortful control moderates the effect of neuroticism on the development of child psychopathology.
There are two methods of processing information:
The overactivity of vulnerability and danger schemas could lead to a distorted interpretation bias (1), attention bias (2), memory bias (3), which could, in turn, lead to anxiety.
The parents of anxious children have several characteristics:
The parenting style overprotection is associated with anxiety but the causal direction is unclear. The anxiety of the child appears to trigger the overprotective parenting style. Parental overinvolvement could lead to reduced opportunities for exposure to novelty or potentially difficult situations which reduces a child’s opportunities to determine accurate information about threat and coping. Parent’s anxious behaviour could also promote and maintain child anxiety through modelling.
The role of mothers appears to be providing protection and care whereas the role of fathers appears to be encouraging children to take on challenges. This means that the role of fathers might lead to less fear whereas the role of mothers leads to more fear. However, this has not been fully studied.
Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) is the most evidence-based prevention and treatment method for anxiety disorders. The main techniques include cognitive therapy (1), behavioural technique exposure (2), understanding emotions (3), relaxation (4) and social skills training (5). The behavioural technique exposure refers to approaching the fearful stimuli gradually. Treatment for child anxiety appears to be less effective when a parent has an anxiety disorder.
Diagnostic specificity states that children of anxious parents are at a greater risk to develop the same anxiety disorder as their parent because parents model or communicate the specific anxieties to the child. Children with anxiety disorders are more likely to have a mother with a current anxiety disorder. Children with social anxiety disorder were more likely to have fathers with lifetime anxiety disorders.
There appears to be specificity for social anxiety disorder and general anxiety disorder. The specificity of social anxiety disorder could be explained by the lack of social skills of the parent which are then modelled to the children. It could also be explained by fathers showing less challenging behaviour. It is possible that the mother transmits cognitive styles (e.g. coping styles) associated with general anxiety disorder to their children.
The child susceptibility hypothesis states that some children who are genetically susceptible to the development of an anxiety disorder because of an anxious temperament are more likely to be affected by the consequences of living in a family with parental anxiety disorders than siblings who are not genetically susceptible.
Behaviourally inhibited temperament (1), maternal anxiety (2), parental overinvolvement (3) and absence of a secure attachment (4) are predictive factors of child anxiety. The absence of a secure attachment could lead the child to develop a worldview which is unsafe and untrustworthy. Parenting appears to play a moderating role in the development of anxiety.
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This bundle contains all the information needed for the for the course "Clinical Developmental & Health Psychology" given at the University of Amsterdam. It contains lecture information, information from the relevant books and all the articles. The following is included
...This bundle contains all the lectures included in the course "Clinical Developmental & Health Psychology" given at the University of Amsterdam. The lectures include the articles. The following is included:
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