Intervention with Young Adults and Adolescents - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 80
About This Presentation
Title:

Intervention with Young Adults and Adolescents

Description:

4 times more likely to develop alcohol dependence than those starting at 20 ... Lability. Appetite/sleep problems. Low frustration tolerance. Poor impulse control ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:97
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 81
Provided by: heathe113
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Intervention with Young Adults and Adolescents


1
Intervention with Young Adultsand Adolescents
  • Heather R. Hayes, M.Ed., LPC
  • Atlanta, Georgia

2
Can you intervene too early?
  • Diabetes vs. Juvenile Diabetes

3
Importance of EarlyIntervention
  • Teens starting alcohol by 14 are
  • 4 times more likely to develop alcohol dependence
    than those starting at 20
  • Reduce odds of dependence for each year delayed
  • OBrien, et al, 2005

4
Adolescent males
  • If at ages 12-14
  • Neurobehavioral disinhibition AND
  • Parental Substance Use Disorder AND
  • Psychosocial Problems
  • Then by Age 22
  • 92 probability of Sub Abuse Disorder
  • Kiriski, Vanyukov, Tarter, 2005

5
Adolescent males
  • If at Ages 12-14
  • Neurobehavioral disinhibition AND
  • Parental Substance Use Disorder WITHOUT
  • Psychosocial Problems
  • Then by Age 22
  • 39 probability of Sub Abuse Disorder

  • Kiriski, Vanyukov, Tarter, 2005

6
Brain Chemistry
  • The adolescent brain is not developed
  • Chemicals poured on an immature brain and
    nervous system (not to mention hormones)
  • Developmental Arrest
  • Telescope

7
Why Use??
  • Experimentation
  • Acceptance from peers
  • Alleviate depression
  • Modify unpleasant feelings
  • Readily available
  • To be cool

8
  • Adolescents who use one drug are likely to use
    another

9
  • Most adolescents do not experience the more
    dramatic withdrawal symptoms or long-term
    consequences (loss or job, marriage, home) like
    adults

10
Adolescent vs. Adult Substance Abuse
  • Less physical dependence
  • Fewer physical problems
  • Consume less over all, but more at one time
  • More negative consequences
  • Move faster from abuse to dependence
  • OBrien, et al, 2005

11
Larger set of enablers
  • Parents
  • Grandparents
  • Teachers
  • Friends Parents
  • Extended family
  • Coaches

12
Risk Factors
Individual
Peer Related
Parent/family
13
Peer Related Factors
  • Peer substance use
  • Peer attitudes on substance use
  • Greater orientation to peers
  • Perception of peer use attitudes
  • Buckstien, O.G. Adolescent substance abuse
  • Assessment, prevention, treatment. Wiley 1995

14
Parent/Family Risk Factors
  • Parental attitudes substance abuse
  • Parental tolerance or deviant behavior
  • Lack of involvement with children
  • Lack of supervision/discipline
  • Non intact/single parent families
  • Physical/sexual abuse
  • Buckstien, O.G. Adolescent substance abuse
  • Assessment, prevention, treatment. Wiley 1995

15
Individual Risk factors
  • Early conduct problems/ aggression
  • Poor academic performance
  • Acceptance of drug/deviant lifestyles
  • Expectancies
  • Risk-taking behaviors
  • Genetic Vulnerability
  • Buckstien, O.G. Adolescent substance abuse
  • Assessment, prevention, treatment. Wiley 1995

16
Assessment
  • Where pt. stands on the following dimensions
  • Alcohol/drug use
  • Negative consequences
  • Dependence
  • Family history
  • Neuropsychological functioning
  • Physical sequelae
  • Psychological functioning
  • Educational functioning
  • Sexuality and sexual issues

17
Substance Abuse Can
  • Mimic psychiatric disorders
  • Worsen pre-existing psychiatric illness
  • Preclude treatment of psychiatric illness
  • Escalate to more serious problems

18
Common Presentations
  • Anxiety
  • Sleep disturbance
  • Depression
  • Interpersonal conflict
  • Behavior characteristic of borderline personality
    disorder or oppositional defiant disorder

19
Components of history
  • Quantity frequency
  • Tolerance/withdrawal
  • Medical
  • Vocational/academic
  • Interpersonal
  • Social
  • Legal
  • Negative behaviors
  • Personality changes
  • Emotional
  • Peers

20
Assessing Consequences of Use
  • Physical health
  • Emotional health
  • Self-esteem
  • Sexuality and sexual behavior
  • Achievement of personal goals
  • Relationships with significant others
  • Academic functioning
  • Job functioning
  • Legal status
  • Finances

21
Stages of Addiction
  • Early
  • Middle
  • Late
  • Too Late

22
Continuum of Substance Use
  • Use
  • Non-problematic, non-compulsive
  • Abuse
  • Problematic, patterned, progressive,
    non-compulsive
  • Dependence
  • Severely problematic, patterned, progressive,
    compulsive

23
Early Stage
  • Experimentation
  • Usually between 11 and 12
  • Peer pressure
  • Use with parents or with parental supervision
    (attitude that use is OK)
  • Use becomes more regular
  • Increased mental and physical energy put into
    getting high

24
Middle Stage
  • Negative consequences begin
  • Shift in priorities
  • Change in attitude
  • Problems at school, work and home
  • Legal Problems
  • Change in friends
  • Physical problems (trips to ER, car wrecks, etc.)
  • Seeking the high
  • Blackouts

25
Late Stage
  • Hiding, lying, conning
  • Low self-esteem
  • Use to feel normal
  • Loneliness
  • Expelled or dropped out of school
  • Run away
  • Pregnancy
  • Legal problems

26
Drugs Used
  • Cigarettes
  • Alcohol
  • Marijuana

27
Marijuana
  • 50 to 80 more potent than in the 1970s
  • We know much more about marijuana and the damage
    it can cause
  • Often laced with something else
  • (Salvia)

28
Drugs Used
  • Methamphetamine
  • And
  • Cocaine
  • Route of administration must be considered

29
Drugs Used
  • Pills
  • Opiates
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Adderal

30
  • Heroin
  • Route of administration must be considered

31
Old Hallucinogens
  • Entactogens drugs that generate tactile
    hallucinations (MDA, MDMA)
  • Entheogens drugs that generate religious
    experiences (LSD, Mescaline, Psilocybin)
  • Dissociants Cataleptic anesthetics (PCP,
    Ketamine)
  • Cannabinoids drugs that have activity at CN
    receptors (THC, Marinol, Ondansetron)

32
Entactogens
  • XTC

33
Entheogens
  • LSD
  • Mushrooms
  • Salvia
  • Mescaline

34
Dissociants
  • Ketamine
  • Dextromethorphan
  • PCP
  • Over-the-counter cough medications
  • Robitussin (Robotripping)
  • Coricidin (Skittles
  • GHB

35
Inhalants
36
Withdrawal
  • Opiate
  • Cocaine/Meth
  • Alcohol
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Post - Acute Withdrawal Syndrome

37
Family Systems
  • Families are systems and have a homeostasis
  • The family members are impacted by the disease of
    addiction
  • Often the family members are sicker than the
    addicts
  • Held together by rules and roles

38
Dysfunctional Family
  • Addiction to chemicals or process addiction
  • Emotionally or psychologically disturbed family
  • Physical, sexual, and/or emotional abuse or
    neglect
  • Fundamentalistic or rigidly dogmatic families

39
Roles
  • The Addict/alcoholic
  • Co-dependent
  • Hero
  • Scapegoat
  • Mascot
  • Lost child

40
Hero
  • The good kid
  • Self-esteem from outside the family
  • Holds the familys self esteem
  • Never good enough
  • Parentified at a young age

41
Scapegoat
  • The bad kid
  • Angry
  • Acting out
  • Defiant
  • Using chemicals
  • Sexually acting out
  • Shifts focus off of the adult addict
  • Self-harm
  • Most honest person in the family

42
Mascot
  • The funny one
  • Distracter
  • Family entertainer
  • Class clown
  • Full of anxiety
  • Cant be serious when needs to be
  • Prone to eating disorders

43
Lost Child
  • Quiet
  • Well behaved
  • Does not expect much from the family
  • Isolated
  • Lives in fantasy
  • Depression
  • Most disturbed in family
  • Serious suicide attempts

44
Rules
  • Its not OK to talk about problems
  • Its not OK to talk about or express our feelings
    openly
  • Dont address issues or relationships
    directly-triangulate
  • Always be strong, good and perfect

45
Rules
  • Do as I say. not as I do
  • Its not OK to play
  • Dont rock the boat
  • We all have the same thoughts and opinions
  • Dont be selfish

46
Importance of Family Involvement
  • Family education about the Disease (we wouldnt
    send a diabetic child home with educating the
    family about diabetes)
  • Family treatment
  • Family therapy
  • Alanon/Naranon/Families Anonymous
  • Multi-family group- helps reduce shame and
    isolation and introduces families to step work

47
  • Treatment NEED NOT be voluntary
  • To be effective!!

48
Treatment What Works
  • Intervention that tackles different domains of
    functioning Educational, Family, Behavioral
  • Completion of treatment
  • Treatment includes family members
  • Group therapy
  • Abstinence based program

49
Treatment
  • What makes a good program
  • Based in Disease Model
  • Twelve Step
  • Coping skills
  • Appropriate Medications/Addictionologist
  • Sleep Hygiene
  • Workbooks
  • Daily meetings
  • 12 step work

50
Treatment
  • Drug testing
  • Daily groups
  • Morning meditation and goals
  • Evening wrap up
  • DBT
  • Motivational Counseling/Interviewing
  • Stages of Change
  • Trauma work
  • Dual-diagnosis

51
Treatment Issues
  • Address physical, psychosocial, educational,
    spiritual/existential aspects of the client

52
Length of treatment
  • NIDA
  • For residential or outpatient treatment,
    participation for less than 90 days is of limited
    or no effectiveness

53
Habilitation vs. Re-habilitation
  • Failure to address developmental delays can set
    up for relapse
  • Educational delays
  • Social skills delays (socializing with out
    chemicals is difficult)
  • Immaturity
  • Self-confidence, promiscuity, inability to deal
    with feelings
  • Very few tools in their toolbox

54
Complicating Factors
  • Use of multiple substances
  • Family members are also abusing
  • Poor parenting practices
  • Adolescents rarely seek treatment voluntarily
  • Involvement in multiple systems legal, school,
    medical
  • High attrition rates

55
  • Co-occurring
  • Disorders

56
Co-occurring Disorders
  • A D use can mask and mimic psychiatric
    disorders
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Lability
  • Appetite/sleep problems
  • Low frustration tolerance
  • Poor impulse control

57
Co-occurring Disorders
  • Chronic use and early age use can cause severe
    disruption in psychosocial functioning
  • How to differentiate
  • History when did problems start
  • Observe as sobriety is achieved (4-6 weeks)

58
Co-occurring Disorders
  • Integrated treatment is better than sequential
    treatment
  • Poorer outcomes with co-morbid disorders
  • Pharmacology alone will not help substance abuse
  • Substance abuse tx alone will not help co-morbid
    disorder

59
Co-occurring Disorders
  • Bi-polar
  • Oppositional Defiant Disorder
  • Conduct Disorder
  • ADD/ADHD
  • Depression
  • Eating Disorders
  • Psychosis

60
Adolescent Girls
  • As young womens bodies begin to experience the
    hormonal changes brought on by puberty and
    natural growth, their risk of substance use is
    heightened.

61
  • Young woman who mature faster than their peers
    are at an increased risk for negative outcomes
    including substance use and abuse
  • Girls that attain sexual maturity earlier have
    an increased possibility of engaging in substance
    abuse earlier and in greater quantities then
    their peers who reach sexual maturity later
  • The link between increased testosterone levels
    and substance use may also explain the tendency
    for early maturing girls to spend more time with
    older, more risk taking peers

62
  • Teenage girls who report low self-esteem are
    much more likely to report substance use or
    abuse.
  • Body image plays a significant role in the
    development of self-esteem of younger girls.
  • Younger girls tend to associate weight loss with
    being prettier and popular whereas older girls
    specifically associate it with being more
    attractive.

63
Treatment of Adolescent Girls
  • Habilitation vs. Rehabilitation
  • Eating Disorder/Body Image
  • Self-esteem Nurturing
  • Sexuality/Relationship Issues
  • Self-mutilation
  • Abusive Relationships
  • Educational/vocational issues

64
Treatment of Adolescent Girls
  • Habilitation vs. Rehabilitation
  • Eating Disorder/Body Image
  • Self-esteem Nurturing
  • Sexuality/Relationship Issues
  • Self-mutilation
  • Abusive Relationships
  • Educational/vocational issues

65
Adolescent/Young Adult Intervention
66
Under 18 (or legal adult age)
  • Parents may check their child into treatment
    against their will.
  • Does help disrupt destructive behaviors

67
Best Way to get the Adolescent into Treatment
  • Taken in the middle of the night
  • Vs.
  • Formal Intervention with no choice in treatment

68
Intervention in Action
  • Intervention is a very structured meeting
  • No judgment
  • No anger
  • Designed to be different than every other kind of
    meeting

69
Role of the Professional
  • Help with communication
  • Monitor feelings
  • Structure the intervention
  • Stop the power struggles
  • Keep the direction positive and loving

70
Role of the Professional (cont)
  • Be firm when needed
  • Assist in treatment options
  • Take into consideration co-occurring psychiatric
    disorders
  • Assess for safety issues
  • Support the family if the addict does not go to
    treatment

71
Who Attends?
  • Anyone with a QUALITY relationship with the
    addicted person

72
Message to the Teen/Young Adult
  • You are valuable
  • You have many good qualities
  • Because we love you, we are together talking to
    about your problem, despite the fact that we were
    afraid you would be angry
  • You are worth our taking the time out of our
    lives to do an intervention

73
Message to the Addict(Cont)
  • You have a disease - and just as if you had
    cancer or diabetes and did not want to get help,
    we would be here saying the same thing

74
Message to the Addict(cont)
  • And we are here offering/insisting that you get
    help

75
First Letter
  • Written in three parts
  • All the participant loves about the IP
    (Identified Patient) what makes them special and
    valuable
  • Describe the impact the IPs disease of chemical
    dependency has on each participant (focus on
    disease, not on IP)
  • Request the IP get help

76
First Letter
  • Reduces Shame
  • Protects Addicts fragile self-esteem
  • Places the burden of blame on the disease
  • Asks for accountability and responsibility

77
Second Letter If IP refuses to accept the help
offered
  • Usually starts out If I am reading you this
    letter, I am extremely disappointed and scared.
  • Here are my boundaries given you are going to
    continue using
  • Must be each individuals bottom line, not the
    leaders

78
Using Intervention Before ChildLeaves with
Transport
  • Sends the child off in a loving way
  • Fully explains to child where s/he is going and
    why
  • Introduces the transport personelle
  • Gives the rehab facility or wilderness a better
    client to start with
  • Can help decrease anger (or at least not add to
    it)

79
Using Intervention Before ChildLeaves with
Transport
  • It is no more or less difficult doing the
    intervention at 3am or at normal wake up time
  • Holds parents accountable for their decision

80
  • Thank you for your attention.
  • Any Questions?
  • Heather R Hayes, M.Ed., LPC
  • Atlanta, Georgia
  • Hrhheatherhayes_at_aol.com
  • 770.335.5004
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com