|
Mental health support required to help children most at-risk during hostile
family conflicts.
In a major funding coup, the University of Otago's Centre for Research on Children
and Families has been jointly awarded $424,000 from the UK's prestigious Nuffield
Foundation. The Centre, in collaboration with the Department of Psychological
Medicine at Cardiff University, Wales, will examine why some children caught
up in hostile family conflicts are more resilient than others, and how these
findings might improve the lives of children most at risk of serious emotional
and psychological harm.
Currently, 10,000 New Zealand children are affected by divorce each year. And
while children under threat of violence can be protected by court orders, the
family justice system is only now giving more recognition to the potential psychological
damage inflicted on children as a result of hostile inter-parental conflict.
How best to help these children is at the heart of research being led by Professor
Gordon Harold, the University of Otago's Alexander McMillan Professor of Childhood
Studies.
"Conflict between parents is normal. But what is extremely important
to understand is what we mean by conflict," says Professor Harold,
who describes harmful conflict as being frequent, intense, child-related and
poorly-resolved. "It's how it's managed that determines whether a
child will be badly affected. From never speaking to each other to witnessing
violence - children can be adversely affected in different ways by the way
parents manage conflict across this spectrum."
The project's main objective is to identify the specific features of conflict
between parents that explain why some children experience little or no difficulties
as a result, while others develop long-term and serious emotional and behavioural
problems.
The aim of the two-year study is also highly practical: to provide objective
research results that have direct application in training programmes for court
workers, and to ensure the specific needs of individual children are met through
targeted support services.
"We need a mental health focus in the family justice system when
working with children and parents rather than just focusing on the legal process
per se," Professor Harold argues. "If researchers can determine
why some children develop certain negative responses earlier, more targeted
intervention can be possible thereby reducing the prospect of long-term psychological
harm.
This could see a radical overhaul of the family justice system in support
of children.
And it could see more at-risk children getting off that trajectory of
suffering from severe emotional and social problems."
Professor Mark Henaghan, Dean of Otago's Law School and an internationally-recognised
expert in family law, is an advisor in the research programme. The interdisciplinary
research team also includes Cardiff University child and adolescent psychiatrist
and expert in the area of human genetics Professor Anita Thapar as co-principal
investigator and Professor Gillian Douglas, Head of Cardiff's Law School and
one of the UK's leading Family Law specialists.
In terms of recent developments in the New Zealand family justice system, Professor
Henaghan says the study is coming "at exactly the right time".
"Under the Domestic Violence Act of 1995, we have recognized psychological
violence - such that it is recognized as a form of violence against children,"
Professor Henaghan says. "But while we can protect children from violence
with a protection order, we've never dealt with how to undo the psychological
damage that's been done to children."
Currently, children can receive therapeutic counselling under the Care of Children
Act or the Domestic Violence Act, but under the Family Courts Act, Professor
Henaghan explains, New Zealand has only recently begun to deal with these issues.
A recent provision only extends counselling support to a 'small' number of children
in 'exceptional' cases who have been psychologically or emotionally damaged
by inter-parental conflict. For the most part, the courts have focused primarily
on providing support to the parents only.
"Traditionally, there has been this attitude of children being seen
but not heard, but children do see and hear the violence, and they can suffer
long-term effects."
Family Court judges, Professor Henaghan predicts, "will be delighted"
by the prospect of having much more sophisticated, yet practitioner friendly,
tools to identify what an individual child needs in terms of support and counselling.
"We want to break the cycles of violence and help children go on
with their lives. But we need to identify at-risk children early so that they
don't harbour long-term negative effects."
The innovative study will draw on an array of large-scale, longitudinal and
genetically sensitive sets of data that are part of an overall programme of
research conducted respectively by Professor Harold and Professor Thapar.
"What is unique about this project is that the combination of studies
will allow a more nuanced examination of specific processes that explain why
some children appear more at risk from the effects of inter-parental conflict
compared to others," Professor Harold explains.
Researchers will examine the relative roles of both negative parenting and
children's own interpretations of the conflict in influencing how children adjust
and react to that conflict so as to identify where best to target support. Children's
reactions may include both internalising symptoms (i.e. blaming themselves,
poor self-esteem, depression) and externalising problems (i.e. acting out, doing
poorly in school, aggressive behaviour). The children's responses will then
be analysed looking at both genetic and environmental factors - the only study
of its kind to do so within a single research programme with the goal of informing
practice within the family justice system.
Professor Harold says it is "crucial" to examine the role
of genetic and family environmental factors together, as well as their interplay,
if it is to be understood why some children react negatively to adverse conditions
in the home. Once understood, court officers will have the objective information
they need to identify at-risk children earlier, and to arrange targeted support
programmes for those children.
"The bottom line message is that this is real-world application
of rigorous scientific research, putting evidence into the hands of practitioners
in a manner that is both accessible and of practical use so as to improve
the lives of children."
Founded in 1943, the Nuffield Foundation is one of the UK's best-known charitable
trusts. Its aim is to advance social well-being through supporting rigorous
research and practical experiment that has the potential to influence policy
or practice.
News is included on the IvyRose website to inform visitors
about current health issues, but not to endorse any particular view or activity.
Any views expressed iin the article above are not necessarily those of IvyRose
Ltd.. Material in this news item was released by the New Zealand based source
listed below on 29 June 2009
and may have been edited (e.g. in style, length, and/or for ease of understanding
by our international readers) for inclusion here. For further information, please
visit their website.
|