Child Behavior Problems


SIGNS & SYMPTOMS
WHAT YOU CAN DO RIGHT NOW
LIST OF ARTICLES
REFERENCE MATERIAL
HELPFUL RESOURCES

Is Your Child Driving You Crazy?

Mental health disorders in children are more common than one might think. In fact, they affect one in every five young people today, interfering with their social, emotional, and cognitive development.

Common childhood disorders include, but are not limited to, depression, anxiety, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorders, conduct disorders, autism, and obsessive-compulsive disorders, like self-cutting, anorexia, bulimia and obsessive, ritualistic behaviors.

Such disorders are both biological (e.g., they may be genetic) and environmental (resulting from exposure to violence, stress, loss, toxins). When left undiagnosed and untreated, children and their families suffer needlessly. Children can't just "get over" these problems alone. They need your help to overcome them, so they become happy, healthy, well-adjusted adults.

Fortunately, most children are resilient. When mental health issues are diagnosed and treated early, children often have excellent long-term outcomes. If you are concerned about your child's emotional health or development, it's important to get a check-up with a qualified therapist...just as you would see your pediatrician if you were concerned about your child's physical health.

What's Normal?
All children play, act out, and occasionally do odd or alarming things. Sometimes these behaviors are transitory and developmental. But if your child shows feelings and behaviors that concern you-or persist long-term-find a therapist that specializes in treating behavioral disorders in children. A diagnostic assessment can determine if a behavior is just a phase or something more serious that requires intervention.

Warning Signs Your Child Needs Help
Anxious or often worried
Poor concentration or inability to sit still, focus attention
Sad and hopeless feelings that do not go away
Very angry or crying most of the time, overreacting to things
Declining performance in school
Unexplained fears
Suicidal tendencies
A need to wash, count, or perform certain rituals hundreds of times per day to avoid unsubstantiated danger
Obsessive dieting/exercise, unexplained weight loss, avoiding food, binging and purging, excessive visits to the bathroom after meals
Loss of interest in things once enjoyed
Daydreaming too much and not completing tasks
Feeling overwhelmed by life
Hearing voices that cannot be explained
Setting fires, purposefully killing or hurting animals
Breaking the law without regard for other people

What You Can Do Right Now
1. Reward good behaviors: Children profoundly want to please their parents. You can ease family tension and build self-esteem by noticing and rewarding positive behaviors in your child on a daily basis. If you do so consistently but bad behaviors don't decrease, he/she may need professional attention.

2. Seek help: Sometimes parents need to relieve their anxiety about their child to understand whether or not an issue is a serious one. If it is serious, Marriage and Family Therapists are uniquely trained to assess the possibilities and diagnose and treat the true problem (i.e. trauma, family dynamics, a true disorder).

3. Be informed about medications: While medications can provide relief from unpleasant symptoms, they do not address the underlying causes of the emotional distress. Individual or family therapy is an appropriate first step in diagnosis because it may offer an effective non-chemical intervention. In other situations, medication and therapy work most effectively together.

4. Seek out support groups and information: Once you have a diagnosis, there's just no substitute for someone who has walked in your shoes. Your therapist can help connect you to appropriate support groups, information resources, and other specialists who can help you and your child.

Anxiety Articles (PDF Files)

Home Matters:First-time Parenthood
Peaceful Parenting
Talking to Children About Violence
Teaching Children to Problem Solve
Summertime Parent
When Your Child Say's "I'm Gay"

Reference Material (PDF Files)

Is Your Child Okay? Evaluating Mental Health Disorders in Children
Proving You Really Care: Healing Sexually Abused Children
Hear, and Feel It All: The Effects of Domestic Violence on Children
Kids Don't Say in Words: Helping Children Navigate Divorce

Helpful Resources

American National Hotline
(800) SUICIDE
(800) 784-2433
www.lacdmh.org

Autism Research Institute
www.autismresearchinstitute.com

California Department of Mental Health
www.dmh.ca.gov

Child Help USA
(800) 4A-Child
(800) 422-4453
www.childhelpusa.org

National Mental Health Association
(800) 789-2647
www.nmha.org