Age 12 To 18 (?) : by Akira Naito SAS Psychiatrist
Age 12 To 18 (?) : by Akira Naito SAS Psychiatrist
Age 12 To 18 (?) : by Akira Naito SAS Psychiatrist
)
By Akira Naito
SAS psychiatrist
3
P
P is 12, and is in her first term at secondary school. She is admitted
to a psych unit following the abrupt cessation of food intake
requiring an emergency paediatric admission.
P is on the 95th centile for height, and 10th for weight. Her LMP was
three weeks previously.
P is described as shy, determined, with a few close friends and her
parents had no concerns about her development.
4
H
H is 15, admitted to a hospital following an attempt to hang herself
at home. H has been hurting herself through cutting and overdosing
for 2 years.
H is the younger surviving child of her parents, who had a stillborn
daughter 18 months before H was born.
H had her menarche at the age of 8, was bullied through primary
school and into secondary school.
5
D
D had a 4 day history of change in personality and behaviour –
appearing preoccupied and anxious about his college work – before the
abrupt onset of a state in which he neither moved nor spoke for hours
at a time, with no food or fluid intake.
D is 16, second term at sixth form; living with mum and step-father
who run a ‘dodgy pub’.
6
F
F is 17. Mum & Dad separated when F was 10. He mostly lives with
Mum who has a ‘unique’ value in life and her spirituality.
Recent episode of his close friend being prosecuted for inappropriate
image on his mobile and rapid deterioration of his mental state shortly
after. He was staying with Dad & his partner since the deterioration and
became withdrawn, terrified and preoccupied with the thoughts that
“people are not real”.
He was disengaging to support and escalating his self-neglect over 2
months. EIS was involved.
7
Context where we are in The World Health Report 2001
Mental Health:
New Understanding, New Hope
https://www.who.int/whr/2001/en/
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Mental health & Adolescence
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Adolescence - Transition to adulthood
Situated brain - Individual experiences in their environment
• Biological (Neural, hormonal & bodily) development in:
https://kidshelpline.com.au/teens/issues/your-brain-when-youre-anxious
12
From
https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/neurobiology-borderline-personality-disorder
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15
Boys Girls
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Cognitive / Emotional development
• Predicated on neurobiological processes & stage of “Theory of Mind”
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Societal (Cultural) expectations for transition
Influences from Socio-Economic state & Immediate Peers/surroundings
• Audience effect (Age 12-14: influenced more by teenagers’ opinions re. risks)
Independence
• Freedom of choice in the face of ‘Responsibility’
• Relative lack of external Structure / Containment – anxiety provoking
Family life cycle (Stage 2,3,4&?5) - Shifts in relationships & roles in:
• Jobs, Education and Leisure activities (Societal trends & Friends in real + online)
• Family: Own romantic relation & carer’s role (as a parent and a family member)
Cf. Parental relationships, own experiences of attachment & serious Incidence
18
Approaches to take as a psychiatrist
Enquiries with Curiosity for understanding of & nurturing “Epistemic trust” with the CYP
• Attempts of mentalising & advocating the needs for the CYP
Assessment
• History taking + Mental State Examination (e.g. snapshot blood test results)
• Formulation, Diagnosis (ICD & DSM), RDoC & (CH)ARMS
• Risk (Static + Dynamic) & Safeguarding (Whose need?, Who’re involved?)
cf. “Resilience matrix” [Resilience-Vulnerability axis + Adversity-Protective axis]
Intervention / Care-planning:
• Psychoeducation & Psychological/Social/Occupational intervention
Lifestyle advice: Sleep, Eating, Exercise/Activities, Social media, Habit (caffeine/substance)
Resiliency promotion (Learning & Unlearning) in light of neuroplasticity
• Medication if appropriate 19
RDoC project (started by NIMH in 2009)
The 6 RDoC circuit based functional dimensions:
1. Negative Valence (acute/potential/sustained Threat & Loss)
2. Positive Valence (Reward responsive, learning & valuation)
3. Cognitive system (attention- perception-memory-Control)
4. Social Process (Affiliation-Attachment-Communication-Self/Others)
5. Arousal & Regulatory system (Circadian rhythm - Sleep)
6. Sensorimotor system (Motor action - Agency - Habit)
21
Medication
• Risks (allergy, overdose, diversion, side effects, effect on development)
• Genetic responses
22
Fluoxetine (SSRI)
1 in 6 may respond
10% difference between placebo and response rates
Peak response weeks 1-2 but maybe longer in children
See at least weekly in first month
Treatment emergent – Agitation/Suicidal thoughts/urges
No increase in completed suicide (in comparing to untreated depression)
Side-effects: headache; GI; sexual dysfunction; hypo Na+; GI bleeds; rash
Discontinuation effects
Serotonin syndrome
Long half life; enzyme inhibitor
23
Risperidone (2nd Generation Antipsychotic)
Licensed for :
Over 5 yrs for aggression in ASC/CD at lower doses and dependent on weight.
Side effects
Uncommon (1 in 100): sexual dysfunction, sight problems (blurred vision), skin rashes
Monitoring required
24
Risperidone use in NICE [in CG158: 1.6]
https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg158/chapter/1-recommendations
30
P
P is 12, and is in her first term at secondary school. She is admitted
to a psych unit following the abrupt cessation of food intake
requiring an emergency paediatric admission.
P is on the 95th centile for height, and 10th for weight. Her LMP was
three weeks previously.
P is described as shy, determined, with a few close friends and her
parents had no concerns about her development.
31
H
H is 15, admitted to a hospital following an attempt to hang herself
at home. H has been hurting herself through cutting and overdosing
for 2 years.
H is the younger surviving child of her parents, who had a stillborn
daughter 18 months before H was born.
H had her menarche at the age of 8, was bullied through primary
school and into secondary school.
32
D
D had a 4 day history of change in personality and behaviour –
appearing preoccupied and anxious about his college work – before the
abrupt onset of a state in which he neither moved nor spoke for hours
at a time, with no food or fluid intake.
D is 16, second term at sixth form; living with mum and step-father
who run a ‘dodgy pub’.
33
F
F is 17. Mum & Dad separated when F was 10. He mostly lives with
Mum who has a ‘unique’ value in life and her spirituality.
Recent episode of his close friend being prosecuted for inappropriate
image on his mobile and rapid deterioration of his mental state shortly
after. He was staying with Dad & his partner since the deterioration and
became withdrawn, terrified and preoccupied with the thoughts that
“people are not real”.
He was disengaging to support and escalating his self-neglect over 2
months. EIS was involved.
34
Any question or your thoughts ?
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? Useful (free) IT tools & skills ?
• Mendeley
• Instapaper
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