Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Introduction: Why a dynamic systems approach to fostering human development?
- Part I Dynamic relationships between genetics and environments
- Part II The dynamic system of the child in the family
- Part III The dynamic system of the child in social and physical environment
- Part IV Dynamic systems approaches to mental health
- 17 A dynamic developmental model of mental health and mental illness
- 18 Dyadic microanalysis of mother–infant communication informs clinical practice
- 19 Current problems of Japanese youth: some possible pathways for alleviating these problems from the perspective of dynamic systems theory
- 20 A different way to help
- 21 Why do siblings often turn out very differently?
- 22 A dynamic systems approach to understanding family and peer relationships: implications for effective interventions with aggressive youth
- 23 Prenatal substance exposure and human development
- Part V Conclusions and outlook
- Index
- References
17 - A dynamic developmental model of mental health and mental illness
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Introduction: Why a dynamic systems approach to fostering human development?
- Part I Dynamic relationships between genetics and environments
- Part II The dynamic system of the child in the family
- Part III The dynamic system of the child in social and physical environment
- Part IV Dynamic systems approaches to mental health
- 17 A dynamic developmental model of mental health and mental illness
- 18 Dyadic microanalysis of mother–infant communication informs clinical practice
- 19 Current problems of Japanese youth: some possible pathways for alleviating these problems from the perspective of dynamic systems theory
- 20 A different way to help
- 21 Why do siblings often turn out very differently?
- 22 A dynamic systems approach to understanding family and peer relationships: implications for effective interventions with aggressive youth
- 23 Prenatal substance exposure and human development
- Part V Conclusions and outlook
- Index
- References
Summary
Sally, an eight-year-old girl, was put on Zoloft, a selective serotonin uptake inhibitor (SSRI) because she was becoming more “compulsive” and fretful, according to her mother. She was washing her hands twenty times a day, refusing to let her mother leave her “alone” at school, and would only play with children at her house. She and her mother were seeing a child psychologist employing “behavioral strategies” involving rewarding “appropriate behavior,” but when the symptoms got worse, Sally was put on medication. The medication, however, made the symptoms even more severe. That's when mother came in for a second opinion and I had an opportunity to conduct a comprehensive evaluation.
I learned that Sally was very sensory and affectively over-reactive, ever since she was an infant. While she had precocious language skills, her ability to sequence actions and engage in “big picture thinking” (i.e. see the forest for the trees) was limited. Mother was very anxious and tended to intrude and overload Sally by yelling a great deal, always demanding Sally do this or that and offering almost no soothing interactions. Father was a workaholic and didn't get home until Sally was asleep and on weekends was either short-tempered or into his work.
Sally was attentive and verbal, but very reactive to sensations, including loud voices or even rapid gestures. She did some pretend play, but it focused mostly on fears, such as dolls running from witches or “perfect worlds” where “everyone is nice.”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Human Development in the Twenty-First CenturyVisionary Ideas from Systems Scientists, pp. 157 - 175Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
References
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