Youth in
a Difficult World
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Not all children enjoy the “carefree” days of
childhood. Unfortunately, when things start to go wrong, people often despair
of being able to repair the damage. NIMH has made research on diagnosis, early
intervention, and treatment of children an absolute priority.
Arguments are waged as to the management of children
who attempt suicide, commit crimes or even those who are abandoned and
neglected. Our society has impoverished resources to answer such questions and
while some hospitals are available, all too often the answer is prison.
Research has demonstrated, however, that children do not need to be
hospitalized or incarcerated to get the help they need. A home-based model of
therapy, called Multi Systemic Therapy or MST, offers treatment services to
young people and their families in their homes. Youth with serious emotional or
behavioral problems, such as antisocial behaviors, substance abuse,
delinquency, or severe depression and suicidality, have been successfully
treated through MST.
This approach shows a more hopeful and positive
approach and focuses on how to help parents assist their children and how to
teach young people to deal with their schools and communities. This program has
been found to be an effective alternative to hospitalization and to jails.
The magnitude of the problem is this: 1 in 10 children
and adolescents suffer from mental illness severe enough to cause some level of
impairment. Nonetheless, fewer than one in five of these ill children receives
treatment. There is heated debate in our society about the proper roles of
medications and psychotherapies for children at risk and children already
suffering. But, one thing is clear: children who go untreated, suffer, cannot
learn, and may not form healthy relationships with peers and family. Some
children are placed on a trajectory for jail rather than college at a very
early age.
MST is a mental health service that focuses on
changing how youth function in their natural settings---that is, at home, in
school, and in their neighborhoods. It is designed to promote positive social
behavior while decreasing problematic behavior, including delinquency,
depression, or substance abuse. MST therapists focus on strengthening the
ability of parents or caretakers to raise children who have complex problems.
Therapists working in the home identify strengths in the families and use these
strengths to develop natural support systems and to improve their parenting.
Therapy is approached as a collaboration between the family and the MST
therapist. The family sets treatment goals and the therapist suggests
strategies to accomplish them.
Specific treatments are used within MST. The
interventions are individualized to the family’s strengths and weaknesses and
address the needs of the child, family, school, peers, and neighborhood.
Therapists working in the home have small caseloads and are available 24 hours
a day, 7 days a week. Treatment teams usually consist of professional
counselors, crisis caseworkers, and psychiatrists or psychologists who provide
clinical supervision.
In a series of randomized clinical trials, MST has
proven effective in reducing long-term rates of criminal offending in serious
juvenile offenders and in reducing their rates of out-of-home placements. For
these youths, long term effects of MST even 4 years post-treatment, were
found. MST reduced long-term rates of
re-arrest by 25% to 70% compared with control groups.
MST has recently been found to be an effective
alternative to psychiatric hospitalization with children in a psychiatric
emergency. In the most recent randomized trial, MST was found to significantly
decrease behavior problems, increase family cohesion, and increase school
attendance compared with hospitalization. MST also reduced symptoms of internalizing
distress and depression. Importantly, families who received MST were
significantly more satisfied with their treatment than were families whose
children were hospitalized. In addition, MST was successful in preventing a
significant proportion of adolescents from being hospitalized. Further, the use
of hospitalization was not offset by increases in the use of other restrictive
placement options. Youth in the hospitalization condition had almost double the
number of days in other out-of-home placements in comparison with youths in the
MST condition.
Studies comparing the costs of MST for serious
juvenile offenders to traditional services have found that MST results in costs
savings by decreasing out-of-home placement costs and costs of incarceration.
A complete manual for MST is available from the
National Institute of Mental Health (301) 443-4513. MST has stringent quality
assurance mechanisms to assure treatment fidelity. Following the treatment
guidelines is critical as research has shown that strong adherence to the model
is correlated with strong case outcomes, and poor adherence is associated with
substantially poorer outcomes. Training, which is key to the success of the
model, is intensive and ongoing. On-site clinical supervision is necessary to
ensure that therapists adhere to the MST program.
For more information about Mental Illnesses - Contact:
The Alliance for the Mentally Ill NAMI of Greater Chicago 1536 West Chicago Ave, Chicago, IL 60622 Phone: 312-563-0445