 |
|
Dr. John Lochman
|
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – A University of Alabama psychologist whose intervention program
for children with aggressive behaviors has been published in three languages is working
with dozens of elementary schools to further gauge the program’s effectiveness
in reducing the risks of future substance abuse by children.
Dr. John Lochman, holder of the Saxon Chair of Clinical Psychology at UA, and staff
at 60 Birmingham-area elementary schools are implementing Lochman’s “Coping
Power” program among select 4th and 5th graders and their parents. Previous smaller-scale
studies with children with aggressive behavior in two states and in the Netherlands
indicate the program is effective in reducing delinquency and substance abuse rates
among youth.
“The intervention kids have a lower rate of conduct disorder than do the comparison
children,” Lochman said. “What we’re seeing is that, in fact, it
does make a difference.” The years just before middle school are one of many
points in a person’s life when intervention efforts can be especially needed
and effective, he said.
Multiple studies, by Lochman and others, have repeatedly shown links between behavior
problems in children and the increased risks of future substance abuse by those children.
In one 1994 study, Lochman and a colleague found that 11-year-old boys who were described
by their classmates as highly aggressive were using substances and were engaged in
crimes against persons at a significantly higher rate than were their non-aggressive
peers, when all of the boys were followed up four years later, at age 15.
“We are most worried about a child who is having problems in both the school
and the home setting,” Lochman said.
In addition to measuring the program’s initial effectiveness in the school systems,
Lochman said he will be measuring the economic feasibility of implementing such a program
“to scale” and how long any positive outcomes last.
The program involves training the schools’ staff in techniques to assist the
children and their parents.
During group and individual sessions, held before or after school and during non-academic
homeroom periods, the school staffs teach children multiple Coping Power techniques,
including an emphasis on seeing other people’s perspective, improving social
skills, alternatives to dealing with conflict, and the use of self-statements and relaxation
and distraction techniques to deal with anger, Lochman said.
In the program’s parental component, school staffs meet periodically with parents
to discuss ways of improving parenting skills, including establishing age-appropriate
rules and expectations for children, ways to reward children for displaying appropriate
behavior, and discipline techniques. Parents also learn ways to support their children
with their homework responsibilities and tips for solving conflict between siblings
and within their families.
Certain parenting practices, including inappropriate discipline, particularly overly
harsh discipline, are fundamentally linked to aggression in children, Lochman said.
“How parents discipline and how kids see their social world, affects their behavior,”
Lochman said. “Kids learn strategies to use their aggressive behavior.”
If a child learns that sometimes when they throw a tantrum they will get their way,
it reinforces the disruptive behavior, he said.
“Some children have ‘terrible twos,’ but for some children the terrible
twos don’t go away.”
The 18-month program with the Birmingham area schools is paid for with part of a $4.9
million National Institute for Drug Abuse grant awarded to Lochman. Intervention began
among the Birmingham-area 4th graders in January and is on-going.
Lochman’s program is being tested in a similar manner in select Tuscaloosa City
and Tuscaloosa County schools. The behavior program has been published in English,
Dutch and Spanish. On March 26, Lochman will be recognized with an honorary doctorate
awarded by Utrecht University in the Netherlands.
Since 1990, Lochman has served as a member of the Conduct Problems Prevention Research
Group and as a co-investigator with Fast Track prevention program, primarily funded
by the National Institutes of Mental Health. Co-investigators involved with Lochman
in the Fast Track program are located at Duke University, Penn State University, the
University of Washington and Vanderbilt University.
|