In session 2, the therapist continues to provide psychoeducation

In session 2, the therapist continues to provide psychoeducation that connects anxiety, depression, and SR, describing how emotional spirals can lead to a quick cascading of behavioral avoidance and distress. An avoidance or challenge Capmatinib hierarchy is then developed that identifies the situations that present challenges to the youth: places where he or she gets stuck, depressed, inactive, or freezes, avoids, and escapes. In the parent meeting, the therapist reviews the youth-parent tracker and

identifies individual family patterns. The therapist highlights three common family patterns that impact families with an SR youth: the Accommodation Spiral (parents respond to youth distress by accommodating or facilitated avoidance), the Passivity-Discouragement Selumetinib order Spiral (parents respond to youth fatigue, avolition, or hopelessness with passivity and accommodation that reinforces youth’s lack of efficacy), and the Aggressive-Coercive Spiral (parents respond to oppositional behavior with anger and criticism, leading to escalated aggression). Parents are then taught a dialectical parenting technique we call “Validate and Cheerlead.”

In this technique, parents are taught to acknowledge both the distress the youth experiences at the same time that they encourage the youth to choose approach-oriented behaviors in the presence of distress. Session 3 formally introduces contingency management

(reward scheduling) systems to help families develop effective incentives and consequences to encourage desired behaviors and efforts to cope. A strong emphasis of this module is to remove reinforcers that are inadvertently reinforcing refusing behaviors (e.g., removing desirable alternatives to going to school, such as, unlimited television time at home). An equally strong emphasis of this module is to brainstorm incentives that are truly reinforcing to the youth, do not necessarily rely on monetary expenditure, and are triclocarban renewable daily. As an example, access to the cell phone is a useful incentive to the extent that parents can give access to the phone once a goal has been accomplished (rising from bed, completing morning routine, attendance for part of or whole school days). At the same time, failure to earn the reward on one day leaves available the opportunity to earn the reward the next day. As such, the youth has a daily renewable reward without the risk of working “out of debt,” a situation that occurs when parents increasingly strip youth of privileges when the desired action is not achieved. Both rewards and expectations are negotiated with the parents and youth to enhance engagement and commitment to the system. In session 4, the therapist reviews family use of reward scheduling and problem-solves challenges to implementation.

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