Conduct problems are the most common reason for referral for psychological and psychiatric treatment in childhood. Reference Moffitt, Scott, Rutter, Bishop, Pine, Scott, Stevenson and Taylor1 The prevalence rate of conduct disorder is 5–10%. Reference Moffitt, Scott, Rutter, Bishop, Pine, Scott, Stevenson and Taylor1 It can lead to negative life outcomes including criminal behaviour and psychiatric disorders, Reference Fergusson, Horwood and Ridder2 with increased costs to the education, health, social and criminal justice services. Reference Scott, Knapp, Henderson and Maughan3 The study published in this month’s Journal by Baker-Henningham et al involved an evaluation of an universal school-based approach – the Incredible Years Teacher Classroom Management programme – which was developed in the US and implemented in Jamaica to help reduce conduct problems in young children. Reference Baker-Henningham, Scott, Jones and Walker4
What are the risk factors for developing early-onset conduct disorder?
Conduct problems include defiant, disruptive and aggressive antisocial behaviour, and if severe and persistent, a diagnosis of ‘early onset’ (under 10 years) conduct disorder may be given (based on ICD-10 or DSM-IV criteria). Environmental, family, school and child risk factors contribute to the development of early-onset conduct disorder, with higher rates found in disadvantaged areas (20%), Reference Attride-Stirling, Davis, Day and Sclare5 in ‘looked-after’ children (37%) Reference Tapsfield and Collier6 and in boys (2:1 boy to girl ratio). Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman7 Poor parenting, the main family risk factor, is characterised by poor supervision, inconsistent, neglectful or harsh discipline and a failure to set clear expectations. Reference Hoeve, Dubas, Eichelsheim, van der Laan, Smeenk and Gerris8
These clear risk factors enable targeting of preventive (early) interventions to those in need, be it individual families, schools or geographical areas, to reduce risk and enhance protective factors.
Why is it important to reduce conduct disorder?
If early behavioural difficulties remain untreated, 40% of children will develop conduct disorder. Reference Coid, Farrington and Coid9 Negative juvenile and adulthood outcomes include: high-school drop-out and truancy rates, antisocial and criminal behaviour; Reference Fergusson, Horwood and Ridder2 psychiatric disorders; drug/alcohol misuse; higher rates of hospitalisation and mortality; unemployment; family breakdown; and intergenerational transmission of conduct problems to children. Reference Scott, Knapp, Henderson and Maughan3 These individual and societal costs related to severe conduct problems are considerable. By age 28, the utilisation of health, social, education and legal services may be ten times higher for individuals with a clinical diagnosis of conduct disorder at age 10 than for those not meeting diagnostic criteria. Reference Scott, Knapp, Henderson and Maughan3
Although individual and societal costs are known, few children actually receive treatment for conduct disorder in high-income countries, or, as Baker-Henningham et al highlight, in low- and middle-income (LAMI) countries. Reference Baker-Henningham, Scott, Jones and Walker4,Reference Belfer10 Treatment typically includes an expensive combination of therapeutic interventions targeted at both the child and family after crisis is reached. Reasons for limited reach include lack of multi-agency working and issues of identifying, targeting and engaging those in need. In LAMI countries, child mental health services are severely limited, expensive and support few children, Reference Patel, Aroya, Chatterjee, Chisholm, Cohen and De Silva11 with less than a third of these countries having a main overseeing body for mental health programmes. Reference Kieling, Baker-Henningham, Belfer, Conti, Ertem and Omigbodun12 More cost-effective interventions to address conduct problems need to be implemented in settings guaranteed to reach the population in need at the earliest opportunity, such as educational settings in Jamaica. Reference Baker-Henningham, Scott, Jones and Walker4
In the UK there have been moves to ensure that publicly funded services are delivered effectively and to specify the use of evidence-based programmes, particularly parent programmes, to manage child behaviour problems (e.g. Parenting Action Plan, 13 Action Plan on Social Exclusion, 14 guidelines from the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) 15 ). This is manifested in government initiatives such as the Pathfinder Early Intervention and Family Intervention Projects in England (https://www.education.gov.uk/publications/eOrderingDownload/Think-Family07.pdf), and Flying Start 16 in Wales. Every Child Matters (in England; www.everychildmatters.gov.uk/publications) and Families First (in Wales; http://wales.gov.uk/topics/childrenyoungpeople/parenting/help/familiesfirst/?lang=en) social policy programmes recommend the blurring of boundaries between organisations and service ‘tiers’ to ensure families get the integrative support they need to avert families reaching crisis point.
Multi-agency work is preferable as children’s complex needs rarely fit within one set of organisational boundaries. For example, a child with behavioural problems may be considered as having special educational needs by education services, considered a ‘child in need’ by Social Services, or having conduct disorder by a child and adolescent mental health service (CAMHS) team.
High-income countries are now shifting focus to promote early intervention, in an attempt to prevent rather than cure conduct disorder. The reasons are threefold; first, from a psychological viewpoint it is easier to change behaviour while children are younger and more malleable before negative behaviours become embedded; two, from a financial viewpoint it is sensible to apply an ‘invest to save’ approach, i.e. to invest in cost-effective prevention programmes rather than pay the expensive costs of ‘cure’ (treatment) or ‘late’ interventions (e.g. prison) and the increased service use associated with conduct disorder; and three, from a prevention science viewpoint we now know ‘what works’. However, despite knowing what works, evidence-based programmes still struggle to be successfully scaled up without top-down government support.
How can we reduce or prevent early-onset conduct disorder?
There is considerable evidence from randomised controlled trials and systematic reviews that targeted complex interventions such as psychosocial parenting (e.g. Furlong et al Reference Furlong, McGilloway, Bywater, Hutchings, Donnelly and Smith17 ) and universal school-based (e.g. Durlak et al Reference Durlak, Weissberg, Dymnicki, Taylor and Schellinger18 ) programmes can reduce or prevent conduct problems and increase child social emotional competence. However, even though 90% of the world population of children and young people live in LAMI countries, only 10% of trials of psychosocial interventions to prevent child mental health problems such as conduct disorder have been conducted in these countries. Reference Kieling, Baker-Henningham, Belfer, Conti, Ertem and Omigbodun12
Despite diagnosis as a child mental health disorder, the proximal antecedents for conduct disorder are mainly psychological, and therefore psychosocial interventions can effectively reduce/treat conduct disorder. Evidence-based parent programmes are grounded in models of parent × child interaction, drawing on Patterson’s theory of coercive family process Reference Patterson and Forgatch19 and Bandura’s social learning theory. Reference Bandura20 Social learning techniques rely strongly on principles of operant conditioning, that is, that behaviour that is rewarded (reinforced) will increase in frequency and be repeated, whereas that which is not will decrease. Accordingly, the key components of parent (and teacher) programmes involve learning to change the antecedents that are eliciting, and the consequences that are maintaining, negative child behaviour. The techniques and collaborative approaches are designed to increase positive behaviours such as adult × child and child × child interactions and relationships.
Programmes with these theoretical underpinnings effectively reduce conduct problems and are increasingly being delivered through multi-agency work between education, social and health services. One such programme is the US Incredible Years series (see www.incredbleyears.com).
The series comprises three linked programmes for children, parents and teachers. The basic Incredible Years group format is one of two parent programmes (the other being Triple P: Positive Parenting Programme) recommended by NICE 15 to reduce/prevent conduct disorder. The Incredible Years programmes incorporate identified effective components to reduce conduct problems, 15 including a collaborative model of parental engagement, behaviour modelling and practice, with the emphasis on building positive parent–child relationships through play (making full use of rewards and praise). In addition, they have the necessary tools for achieving fidelity and effective replication of results.
The Dinosaur child programmes are delivered in school to whole classes, or to small groups, to improve social emotional competence – a protective factor against conduct disorder development.
The parent programme’s structured curriculum is delivered to small groups of parents/carers (of children aged 0–12 years) by two facilitators (from various service backgrounds) over 4–18 weeks (2 h/week). Pragmatic, multi-agency, randomised controlled trials in Irish and Welsh community settings with parents of ‘at risk’ young children demonstrated significant short-term Reference McGilloway, Ni Mhaille, Bywater, Furlong, Leckey and Kelly21,Reference Bywater, Hutchings, Daley, Whitaker, Yeo and Jones22 and long-term Reference Bywater, Hutchings, Daley, Whitaker, Yeo and Jones22 reductions in child problem behaviour and also in parental depression (which is highly correlated with child conduct problems, suggesting potential benefits if child and adult mental health services link up in programme delivery). Other key findings included the impact of positive role models; reflective statements and praise towards parents by facilitators increased the use for these behaviours by parents with their children, Reference Eames, Daley, Hutchings, Whitaker, Hughes and Jones23 and this positive parenting behaviour led to improved child behaviour. Reference Eames, Daley, Hutchings, Whitaker, Hughes and Jones23,Reference Gardner, Hutchings, Bywater and Whitaker24 Moderator analyses showed that boys, younger children and children with mothers with severe depression, showed greater improvement in conduct problems post-intervention. Risk factors such as teen or single parenthood, or very low income, showed no predictive effects, implying intervention was at least as successful at helping the most disadvantaged families compared with the more advantaged. Reference Gardner, Hutchings, Bywater and Whitaker24 The Incredible Years parent programme was also found to be cost-effective. Reference Furlong, McGilloway, Bywater, Hutchings, Donnelly and Smith17
The Incredible Years Teacher Classroom Management programme reflects the parent programme format and applies the same effective principles and strategies. Teachers attend groups for 1 day per month for 5–6 months. Recent randomised controlled trial results in Ireland demonstrate more positive teacher and child behaviours, and fewer negative behaviours, Reference McGilloway, Hyland, NiMhaille, Lodge, O'Neill and Kelly25 reflecting the findings of Baker-Henningham et al. Reference Baker-Henningham, Scott, Jones and Walker4
Baker-Henningham et al’s study highlights the benefits of offering a universal Teacher Classroom Management programme, with excellent results for those with higher levels of problem behaviour. However, although universal services reduce potential stigma, others favour a more targeted approach which may be more cost-effective by ensuring resources are reaching those most in need and with ‘more room’ to change. Reference Scott, O'Conner and Futh26
A limitation of offering psychosocial programmes in just one context, such as the school, could be that positive behaviours learned in that setting may not generalise to other contexts. A multimodal approach may be required by adding a child and/or parent programme for additional behaviour change/maintenance. This approach has been shown to have a cumulative effect on positive behaviour change. Reference Webster-Stratton, Reid, Gresham and Shaughenessy27
Conclusions
The focus of many psychiatric and psychological services, such as CAMHS in the UK, is treatment rather than prevention. However, it is more cost-effective for the individual, and for society, to implement preventive, evidence-based interventions as early as possible to mitigate exposure to cumulative risks for the development of mental health problems such as conduct disorder. Reference Walker, Wachs, Grantham-McGregor, Black, Nelson and Huffman28 Furthermore, it is important to deliver high-quality programmes to maintain effectiveness. Reference Engle, Fernald, Alderman, Behrman, O'Gara and Yousafzai29 In LAMI countries, where there is a lack of child mental health services, the earliest chance of programme implementation may not be until children enter nursery or school. Reference Baker-Henningham, Scott, Jones and Walker4
The Incredible Years parent programme appears to be transportable across different ethnic groups Reference Reid, Webster-Stratton and Beauchaine30 and different countries, Reference Furlong, McGilloway, Bywater, Hutchings, Donnelly and Smith17 and the universal teacher programme is similarly demonstrating its transportability across countries with different cultures and economic standing. Reference Baker-Henningham, Scott, Jones and Walker4,Reference Baker-Henningham31
A universal school approach could be supplemented by more targeted interventions to enhance generalisabilty of behaviour change across home–school contexts, an approach supported by NICE. 32
With the blurring of organisational boundaries there is a growing shared responsibility for the ‘psychological management’ of conduct disorder, suggesting that evidence-based behaviour management training should be considered as an inclusion in initial training for professionals who are in regular contact with families and children, including foster carers and nursery workers.
In summary, the collective evidence suggests that the effective prevention of conduct disorder relies on a combination of key ingredients, including:
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(a) an integrated, multi-agency, multimodal approach
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(b) the scaling up of evidence-based universal and targeted ‘early’ interventions
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(c) careful attention paid to identification of ‘at risk’ populations
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(d) ongoing training and fidelity to preserve the mechanisms of change.
Attention to these combined ingredients would help to reduce the considerable individual, family, societal and service costs that are incurred by untreated conduct problems and conduct disorder.
eLetters
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