1 / 22

CHAPTER 15

CHAPTER 15. PERVASIVE DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS AND MENTAL RETARDATION. PERVASIVE DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS. Conditions that become apparent early in a child's development and affect all major developmental systems (social, cognitive, and language) Autistic disorder Asperser's disorder

coye
Download Presentation

CHAPTER 15

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CHAPTER 15 PERVASIVE DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS ANDMENTAL RETARDATION

  2. PERVASIVE DEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS • Conditions that become apparent early in a child's development and affect all major developmental systems (social, cognitive, and language) • Autistic disorder • Asperser's disorder • Childhood disintegrative disorder • Rett’s disorder

  3. AUTISTIC DISORDER • Characteristics • Usually noticed by age of 3 years • Marked difficulty in social interaction and communication • Restricted range of interests • Strong desire for routine • 75% are mentally retarded

  4. AUTISTIC DISORDER • Deficits • Theory of mind – Inability to infer the mental states of others and to think abstractly • Executive functions – Cognitive operations involved in planning and flexibility of response • Language – Many never speak and those who do have stereotypical, repetitive, idiosyncratic speech patterns • Joint attention behaviors – Inability to maintain eye contact and social interaction

  5. AUTISTIC DISORDER • CAUSES • Brain abnormalities • Genetic factors • Stress or injury may interact with genetic vulnerability • TREATMENT • Behavioral – Increase skills, reduce problem behaviors • Learning techniques to take into account cognitive strengths and weaknesses • Medications to treat some symptoms

  6. HEREDITARY FACTORS IN AUTISTIC DISORDER

  7. ASPERGER’S DISORDER • May be a mild form of autism • Impaired social interaction • Restricted and repetitive patterns of behavior and interests • Does not include language delays and absence of autism • Does not include impaired cognitive development of autism • Usually not diagnosed until school age

  8. CHILDHOOD DISINTEGRATIVE DISORDER • Normal development until age 3 or 4, followed by loss of previously acquired • Language, social, and motor skills and bowel and bladder control • Changes thought to be associated with deterioration in the nervous system • Very rare – One in one million births • More common in boys than girls • Causes unknown

  9. RETT’S DISORDER • Progressive disorder appearing after normal development at about 5 months of age • Head stops increasing in size, so becomes smaller than normal (microcephaly) • Loss of previously acquired developmental skills (language, social, and motor) • Typically affects only girls • Most become severely retarded • No specific treatment

  10. MENTAL RETARDATION • Characteristics • Subaverage intellectual function with significant limitations in adaptive functioning that begins before age 18 • Levels • Mild – IQ 50-55 to 70 • Moderate – IQ 35-40 to 50-55 • Severe – IQ 20-25 to 35-40 • Profound – IQ below 20 or 25 • Incidence • One in every 100 individuals in the US

  11. MENTAL RETARDATION

  12. MENTAL RETARDATION

  13. CAUSES OF MENTAL RETARDATION • Genetically based • Dominant genes • Tuberous sclerosis • Recessive genes • Genetic mutation • Phenylketonuria (PKU) • Chromosomal abnormalities • Fragile X syndrome • Down syndrome • Polygenetic

  14. FRAGILE X CHROMOSOME

  15. DOWN SYNDROME

  16. CAUSES OF MENTAL RETARDATION • The fetal environment • Maternal infections • Chronic conditions • Blood incompatibilities between mother and child • Chemicals in fetal environment • Alcohol- Fetal alcohol syndrome • Radiation • Malnutrition • Factors associated with age and stress of mother

  17. CAUSES OF MENTAL RETARDATION • Problems during birth • Prematurity • Low birth weight • Lack of oxygen during birth process • Too-rapid progress through the birth canal • Damage to the nervous system after birth • Infections (encephalitis) • Extreme malnutrition • Blows to the head • Tumors • Oxygen deprivation due to accidents (such as near drowning) • Environmental poisons (lead paint)

  18. CAUSES OF MENTAL RETARDATION • Psychosocial disadvantage • Impoverished environment • 30-50% of variation in intelligence test scores can be attributed to environmental influences

  19. PREVENTION OF MENTAL RETARDATION • Primary prevention • Public education about need for prenatal care, dangers of pregnant women drinking, and dangers of exposure of children to lead • Amniocentesis and ultrasound scanning that may lead to termination of pregnancy • Secondary prevention • Treatment, as in special diet for PKU children • Tertiary prevention • Maximizing child’s skills and potential • School- and community-based educational, vocational, and skills training programs

  20. EARLY INTERVENTION FOR MENTAL RETARDATION • Children at psychosocial risk • Home-based interventions • Special centers with trained staffs, supplemented by home visits • School-based programs • Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) guarantees free public education for all disabled children, including the mentally retarded • Least-restrictive placement • Mainstreaming versus special placement

  21. VOCATIONAL AND SOCIAL SKILLS TRAINING FOR MENTALLY RETARDED ADULTS • Job preparation – Sheltered workshops • Learning how to deal with personal, financial, and sexual exploitation • Teach social skills and how to say “no” • Training in appropriate sexual behavior

  22. RECOGNITION AND TREATMENTE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL PROBLEMS • Forty percent of mentally retarded meet criteria for some other disorder • Severely and profoundly retarded often have autism or pervasive developmental disorder • One-fourth have a personality disorder • Many adolescents have temper tantrums, aggressive and destructive behavior, and alcohol and drug abuse • Children with fragile-X syndrome often have ADHD • Children and adults with Down syndrome often suffer from depression

More Related