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A/Prof Frances Thomson Salo Dept of Psychiatry, Uinversity of Melbourne 24.1.11 Recognition of need for cultural sensitivity to importance of local cultural beliefs about infants What is infant mental health? Some newborn capacities Negative factors impacting on development How to intervene with parents and babies when there are difficulties Trauma – signs of Post Traumatic Stress Intervention and treatment principles Treatment for infants and carers Attachment trauma The emotional, social and psychological wellbeing of a baby – years Secure attachment is important for good self esteem, relationships, cognitive capacities, work Concept of ‘baby as subject’ in his or her own right Assessment: “Diagnostic Classification 0-3” Increasing number of interventions available eg Dr Giang’s Floortime with autistic infants and book about playing with infants Infants are born primed to communicate Before birth they are aware of mother’s voice, feelings, also father and family At birth they can recognise mother’s face and voice, and father’s voice Within the first hour they can turn to track parents on the other side of room, and imitate They need to attach, be kept in mind and enjoyed They are very sensitive to physical and emotional feelings of other people They are aware of anger and fear in intimate partner violence in utero The situation is urgent for the infant experience organises the brain to filter future experiences Infant vulnerabilities: weak cues, difficulty regulating themselves, extreme prematurity Parents’ depression, teenage pregnancy, mental illness, substance use, family violence Mazelko et al, 2010 Mother’s affection at months predicts adult attachment difficulties JECH, 1-5 Feeding difficulties may be problems of emotional communication Less attunement with feeding linked with less attunement with grandmother (Henry 2004) - link with force feeding? Irritability (RCT: 25% mental health diagnosis at yrs) Gaze avoidance and attachment difficulties Infant depression Neglect Trauma including transgenerational transmission: ‘ghosts in the nursery’ include hunger and poverty in the past Many group and individual interventions, and programs Re-present infant differently to parent: as an interactive person Encourage: -time spent with baby -gaze in en-face communication -touch -and play With feeding difficulties, encourage pleasure and autonomy Clinicians communicate with baby as a person, with expressive gaze, gesture and vocalisation To understand baby’s experience To re-present to his or her parents As witness to and direct victims of violence Co-existing risks eg poverty, chaotic life style, substance use, serious mental illness Cumulative trauma -6 months: hypervigilance 6-12 months: increased anxiety in strange situations 12–8 months: unusual clinginess with caregiver Disorganised attachment: cortisol elevated but anxiety is not outwardly shown Infants become frazzled and ‘snap’ as their switch point has been shifted by trauma Infants’ internal representations are frightening They may feel anger with parents (in part anxiety driven) Restore safety and routines Maintain sensitivity to re-traumatisation Provide help for depressed or traumatised carers to be available to child Helpful for carers to be in sessions with infants when traumatic feelings are revived Especially if carer is reluctant to explore their own trauma Enable re-experience of trauma in tolerable doses: help child master the trauma by play Which setting? Whatever is most useful Treatment should be specific to the case video, or encourage touch and massage eg 3 month old infant can show in behaviour what happened A child from months has symbolic play Talk to pre-verbal child as if they understand in ageappropriate words Intervention may be single or need to be repeated Infants may need intervention to recover fully Under months: desensitisation approaches to emphasise interactional encounters involving specific distress situation, with caregiver or therapist as primary stimulus Eg 4-month-old abused by father during feeding - focussed on feeding in treatment (Gaensbauer, 2004) + months: desensitisation with techniques to recreate trauma emphasising specifics of traumatic stimulus or context Asking children about the trauma and how it affected them often has a positive effect Open discussion of the trauma to master anxiety and grief produces relief Allow 2–3 y o child to recreate trauma through appropriate play eg give dolls and encourage to ‘make a story’, with carers present for sessions Developmentally sensitive play therapy to work through, with parent, grandparent, foster carer Perhaps with separate counselling and developmental guidance for carers Attachment trauma is the most destructive kind of trauma Abused infants become attached to the abuser and cling to them They later choose relationships that re-traumatise It needs a therapeutic attachment relationship to work through it Infant mental health Zeanah, C H, (ed) (2010) Handbook of infant mental health New York, NY: Guilford Press, 3rd edn Diagnostic Classification 0-3 R (2005) Washington, D.C.: Zero to Three Henry, L (2004) Is my baby still hungry? A study of Vietnamese mothers feeding interaction with their month old babies Masters theses, University of Melbourne unpubd Maselko, J, Kubzansky L, Lipsitt L, Buka SL, (2010) Mother’s affection at months predicts emotional distress in adulthood J Epidemiol Community Health, 1-5 Trauma Gaensbauer, T J., (2004) Telling their stories: representation and re enactment of traumatic experiences occurring in the first year of life, Zero to Three, 25 -31 Scheeringa, M & Gaensbauer,T (2000) Post-traumatic stress disorder In: Handbook of infant mental health, second edition, Zeanah C H (ed.) New York: Guildford Press [...]... separate counselling and developmental guidance for carers Attachment trauma is the most destructive kind of trauma Abused infants become attached to the abuser and cling to them They later choose relationships that re-traumatise It needs a therapeutic attachment relationship to work through it Infant mental health Zeanah, C H, (ed) (2010) Handbook of infant mental health New York, NY: Guilford... and routines Maintain sensitivity to re-traumatisation Provide help for depressed or traumatised carers to be available to child Helpful for carers to be in sessions with infants when traumatic feelings are revived Especially if carer is reluctant to explore their own trauma Enable re-experience of trauma in tolerable doses: help child master the trauma by play Which setting? Whatever is... predicts emotional distress in adulthood J Epidemiol Community Health, 1-5 Trauma Gaensbauer, T J., (2004) Telling their stories: representation and re enactment of traumatic experiences occurring in the first year of life, Zero to Three, 25 -31 Scheeringa, M & Gaensbauer,T (2000) Post-traumatic stress disorder In: Handbook of infant mental health, second edition, Zeanah C H (ed.) New York: Guildford... recreate trauma emphasising specifics of traumatic stimulus or context Asking children about the trauma and how it affected them often has a positive effect Open discussion of the trauma to master anxiety and grief produces relief Allow 2–3 y o child to recreate trauma through appropriate play eg give dolls and encourage to ‘make a story’, with carers present for sessions Developmentally... Treatment should be specific to the case video, or encourage touch and massage eg 3 month old infant can show in behaviour what happened A child from 6 months has symbolic play Talk to pre-verbal child as if they understand in ageappropriate words Intervention may be single or need to be repeated Infants may need intervention to recover fully Under 6 months: desensitisation approaches to ... interventions, and programs Re-present infant differently to parent: as an interactive person Encourage: -time spent with baby -gaze in en-face communication -touch -and play With feeding... to work through it Infant mental health Zeanah, C H, (ed) (2010) Handbook of infant mental health New York, NY: Guilford Press, 3rd edn Diagnostic Classification 0-3 R (2005) Washington,... about infants What is infant mental health? Some newborn capacities Negative factors impacting on development How to intervene with parents and babies when there are difficulties Trauma