Adolescent Males' Beliefs And Feelings About The Consequences Of A Partner's Pregnancy: A Survey And Intervention Study
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$170,095.00
Summary
Each year, in Australia, approximately 28,000 adolescents become pregnant. The psychological, social and financial cost of adolescent pregnancy in Australia is substantial, in both the long and short term. An unexpected finding in North American studies is that a substantial number of adolescent pregnancies occur by design. Prevention programs in Australia and elsewhere assume adolescents do not wish to become pregnant and focus on educating adolescents about causes rather than consequences. Res ....Each year, in Australia, approximately 28,000 adolescents become pregnant. The psychological, social and financial cost of adolescent pregnancy in Australia is substantial, in both the long and short term. An unexpected finding in North American studies is that a substantial number of adolescent pregnancies occur by design. Prevention programs in Australia and elsewhere assume adolescents do not wish to become pregnant and focus on educating adolescents about causes rather than consequences. Research conducted by one of us (JAQ) found that over 75% of pregnant teenagers said they had deliberately become pregnant. Another of us (JTC) studied 1,500 Australian adolescents attitudes and beliefs about pregnancy and parenthood. The findings showed high levels of idealisation, especially in males. Males have been largely neglected in adolescent pregnancy research. The first component of this study is a survey of 500 adolescents to investigate their attitudes and beliefs about pregnancy occurring in a sexual partner, and the consequences of that event for them both. The assessment tool is a computer role-play simulation with its starting point the announcement of a pregnancy. The intervention study involves 300 adolescents and comprises viewing and discussing a video in which 4 adolescent males talk about their experiences of the consequences of pregnancy in a sexual partner. The use of 4 groups with different sequences of assessment and intervention will enable us to ascertain the effectiveness of the intervention. Of particular interest is whether the video or the role-play makes any impact on idealised attitudes and beliefs. This research is the first undertaken on adolescent male attitudes and beliefs using a computer role-play. It will provide essential information for the development of effective, male-oriented prevention programs which focus on consequences as well as causes of adolescent pregnancy.Read moreRead less
Behavioural And Neuropsychiatric Aspects Of Transition To Severe Conduct Disorder In Adolescence.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$343,100.00
Summary
Conduct disorder represents an enormous cost to Australian society directly via the mental health and forensic systems, and indirect costs via its associations with other mental health problems, relationship problems, impaired social functioning, and substance use problems. Behavioural-family-based treatment have good success rates with young children with cooperative parents, however, there are a minority who progress to chronic problems despite this. Risk and resilience factors identifying chr ....Conduct disorder represents an enormous cost to Australian society directly via the mental health and forensic systems, and indirect costs via its associations with other mental health problems, relationship problems, impaired social functioning, and substance use problems. Behavioural-family-based treatment have good success rates with young children with cooperative parents, however, there are a minority who progress to chronic problems despite this. Risk and resilience factors identifying chronic patterns in early childhood are the key to early intervention. In previous research, this research team showed for the first time that callous-unemotional traits, a feature of chronic psychopathy, could be measured in children as young as 4 years, and was predictive of a range of negative outcomes. However, it was also found that the key neuropsychiatric markers characteristic of psychopathy, including reward dominance-punishment insensitivity and deficits in affective empathy, did not exist in conduct problem children prior to adolescence. Around the time of puberty, it appears that important changes occur in cognitive-affective processing styles that are associated with the adult form of psychopathy and antisocial behaviour. Thus, this research raises critical questions about the development of severe antisocial behaviour (or psychopathy) through the childhood to adolescent years. Our evidence indicates that early adolecence may be the period when intrapsychological characteristics representing chronic risk become concrete. The current research will be the first to map the development common neuropsychiatric markers (affective empathy, punishment insensitivity) of severe antisocial processes through the late childhood-adolescent period. The findings will have clear implications for models of antisocial behaviour and clinical approaches to working with conduct problem children and adolescents.Read moreRead less
A Parent Education And Skills Training Intervention For Young Adolescents With Autism
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$436,500.00
Summary
Autism is a most severe and prevalent lifelong developmental disorder affecting approximately one in every thousand children and their families. Autism is associated with personal suffering and is a significant burden and stress for parents, families and carers and cost to the community. In earlier work we have demonstrated that providing a structured program of parent education and guidance to families with preschool children with autism leads to improved parental adjustment and mental health. ....Autism is a most severe and prevalent lifelong developmental disorder affecting approximately one in every thousand children and their families. Autism is associated with personal suffering and is a significant burden and stress for parents, families and carers and cost to the community. In earlier work we have demonstrated that providing a structured program of parent education and guidance to families with preschool children with autism leads to improved parental adjustment and mental health. The program also led to behavioural and developmental benefits for the child. The early secondary school years bring further stress and difficulty to adolescents with autism and their families. This project aims to assess the effectiveness of a parent education and training program for parents with autistic adolescents aged 12-14 years. If shown to be effective, this manual based intervention can be readily used by professionals to promote parent mental health, family adjustment and improve the wellbeing and outcome for adolescents with autism. As a result, family stress and the necessity of out of home care may be reduced and school participation improved.Read moreRead less
A Comparative Structural And Functional Cerebral MRI Study Of First Episode Schizophrenia And Long-term Cannabis Use.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$373,125.00
Summary
Cannabis is used for its subjective effects that include euphoria, depersonalisation, somnolence, and altered perceptions of temporal contingency.It is a controlled substance yet one quarter of Australian adolescents and seven percent of adults use cannabis regularly. Chronic use of cannibis can impair frontal brain functioning, affecting the capacities for attention, working memory and concentration.These neurocognitive deficits bear striking similarities to those associated with the negative s ....Cannabis is used for its subjective effects that include euphoria, depersonalisation, somnolence, and altered perceptions of temporal contingency.It is a controlled substance yet one quarter of Australian adolescents and seven percent of adults use cannabis regularly. Chronic use of cannibis can impair frontal brain functioning, affecting the capacities for attention, working memory and concentration.These neurocognitive deficits bear striking similarities to those associated with the negative symptom cluster of schizophrenia,which is related to frontal brain dysfunction. The proposed study will be the first of it's kind to apply sophisticated neuroimaging techniques to investigate how long-term adolescent cannabis use effects the structure and function of the brain and to make comparative analyses with the brain changes associated with first episode schizophrenia. We predict that structural brain abnormalities that are consistent in localisation, if not in degree, will be detected in long-term cannabis using and first episode schizophreniaparticipants and that there will be even more profound abnormalities in the first episode schizophrenia cannabis users. We will use the Tower of London (TOL) task to activate certain areas associated with executive functioning (for instance attention, memory, and strategic planning). Here, we expect lower intensity activation of the prefrontal cortex during TOL performance both in the cannabis and first episode schizophrenia groups and that the activation will be lowest of all for the cannabis using first episode schizophrenia group. The methodology to be applied in this study offers a unique opportunity to enhance our understanding of the structural and functional markers of first episode schizophrenia and cannabis use in the neural substrate.Read moreRead less