| Literature DB >> 33740166 |
Sophie Bennett1,2, Isobel Heyman3,4, Sophia Varadkar3,4, Anna Coughtrey3,4, Fahreen Walji3,4, Roz Shafran3,4.
Abstract
Behavioural difficulties impact greatly upon quality of life for children with chronic illness and their families but are often not identified or adequately treated, possibly due to the separation of physical and mental health services. This case study describes the content and outcomes of guided self-help teletherapy for behavioural difficulties in a child with epilepsy and complex needs using an evidence-based behavioural parenting protocol delivered within a paediatric hospital setting. Behavioural difficulties and progress towards the family's self-identified goals were monitored at each session. Validated measures of mental health and quality of life in children were completed before and after intervention and satisfaction was measured at the end of treatment. Measures demonstrated clear progress towards the family's goals and reduction in weekly ratings of behavioural difficulties. This case demonstrates that a guided self-help teletherapy approach delivered from within the paediatric setting may be one way of meeting unmet need.Entities:
Keywords: Behaviour; Epilepsy; Mental health; Paediatrics; Self-help
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33740166 PMCID: PMC8458180 DOI: 10.1007/s10880-021-09768-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Psychol Med Settings ISSN: 1068-9583
Session-by-session content of intervention
| Session | Worksheet/s sent after guided self-help teletherapy calls | Explanation of strategy |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | One: one time | Parents were encouraged to spend at least 10 min per day alone with their child. They would spend the time in whichever way the child chose to. This is a preventative strategy, designed to increase the amount of positive attention the child received from the parent and therefore reduce the need to gain their attention in other ways at other times of the day. Parents learnt how to use a ‘commentary style’ of talking to their child, rather than teaching or praising during this time. The rationale was given that the parents were building up a ‘bank’ of attention, so that children would not need it as much at other points in the day |
| 2 | Praise | Parents used praise as a reward whenever their child was behaving in a way that they wanted to encourage. This praise was specific to the activity and occurred as closely to the desired behaviour as possible, as well as being positively framed (i.e. praise for |
| 3 | Active ignoring | Parents were encouraged to ignore any unwanted behaviours that were not dangerous. The ignoring was ‘active’ as the parent continued to monitor behaviour so that any later desirable behaviour could later be praised |
| 4 | Rewards | Rewards were used as additional reinforcement for behaviours that parents particularly wanted to encourage. This was particularly helpful where there was no intrinsic reward for complying with a request. Parents were encouraged to create individualised reward charts in collaboration with their child, based on things their child enjoyed and using rewards that were appealing to the child. The child and parent were asked to create a list of possible rewards together |
| 5 | Effective instructions | Parents learned to use clear commands, which were short, simple and not directed as a question (e.g. can you?, would you?). This is particularly important in the context of children with cognitive difficulties, who may struggle to understand or remember long and complicated commands |
| 6 | Time out | A brief interruption of pleasant activities for the child, to act as a mild consequence. The child is removed from the situation in which the difficult behaviour occurred and is placed in a quiet and boring place, losing both attention from their parents and their freedom temporarily. As with ignoring, this is paired with praise and rewards in order to incentivise desired behaviour |
| 7 | Making a plan | Parents make a plan for times that may be challenging, such as specific locations, or specific situations. They 1. Get ready for the event—e.g. ensuring the child will be kept interested, that they are not going to be tired or hungry, and checking whether anything should be removed from the situation in advance to give the greatest chance of success, 2. Set rules with the child about their expected behaviour, 3. Set rewards for following the rules, 4. Set consequences for not following the rules, and 5. Set practice runs ahead of time |
| 8 | Relapse prevention/’looking ahead’ | Parents consider what strategies have been effective for improving the difficult behaviours. They consider what to do should a new difficulty develop or an old one return. This includes monitoring the difficult behaviours, what the child and parent did and whether or not the response was successful in reducing the behaviours. They consider what may have changed, such as stopping one-to-one time. It is suggested that they use the ‘making a plan’ worksheet to prevent the problem escalating, and to set up a formal programme of rewards and consequences if this is not working |
Fig. 1Mean scores on the session-by-session goal tracking measure for each goal and for behavioural symptoms measured by the CORC ‘How are things? ODDp’ session-by-session measure
Scores on standardised measures at baseline, end of treatment and follow-up
| Scale | Subscale | Time point | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | End of treatment | Follow-up 1 | Follow-up 2 | ||
| SDQ | Total (range) | 21 (very high) | 11 (close to average) | 17 (high) | 18 (high) |
| Emotional problems (range) | 6 (high) | 2 (close to average) | 3 (close to average) | 3 (close to average) | |
| Conduct problems (range) | 1 (close to average) | 0 (close to average) | 0 (close to average) | 0 (close to average) | |
| Hyperactivity (range) | 7 (slightly raised) | 6 (slightly raised) | 7 (slightly raised) | 8 (high) | |
| Peer problems (range) | 7 (very high) | 3 (slightly raised) | 7 (very high) | 7 (very high) | |
| Prosocial (range) | 6 (low) | 9 (close to average) | 9 (close to average) | 8 (close to average) recovered | |
| Impact (range) | 7 (very high) | 3 (very high) | 6 (very high) | 7 (very high) | |
| RCADS T-score | Total (T-score) | 48 (68) | 18 (37) | 31 (45) | 39 (51) |
| Social phobia (T-score) | 10 (52) | 5 (35) | 7 (39) | 10 (45) | |
| Panic disorder (T-score) | 7 (74) | 0 (36) | 2 (43) | 4 (49) | |
| Separation anxiety (T-score) | 12 (> 80) | 3 (53) | 11 (> 80)* | 13 (> 80) | |
| Generalised anxiety (T-score) | 6 (58) | 1 (32) | 1 (32) | 1 (32) | |
| Obsessive-compulsive disorder (T-score) | 0 (43) | 0 (35) | 0 (35) | 0 (35) | |
| Major depression (T-score) | 13 (78) | 9 (54) | 11 (59) | 11 (59) | |
| PedsQL | Physical functioning | 34.375 | 43.75 | 40.625 | 31.25 |
| Emotional functioning | 60 | 45 | 95 | 80 | |
| Social functioning | 5 | 15 | 15 | 10 | |
| School functioning | 15 | 35 | 30 | 30 | |
| Psychosocial | 80 | 31.67 | 46.67 | 40 | |
*One item (“my child feels scared to sleep on his/her own”) was marked as N/A as Mrs AB said that she slept with AB every night due to her seizures