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conferenceseries
.com
Volume 19, Issue 2 (Suppl)
Int J Emerg Ment Health, an open access journal
ISSN: 1522-4821
Mental Health 2017
June 21-23, 2017
Mental Health and Human Resilience
June 21-23, 2017 London, UK
3
rd
International Conference on
The mental health syndrome paradigm: A new paradigm to improve child development and protection
Colin Pritchard
Bournemouth University, UK
T
his is a journey the team has shared as we gave up established ideas about child neglect/abuse, which is challenging as we confront
anxieties about adding to stigma surrounding mental health problems. Consequently, colleagues might also find this difficult.
Based on recent and new research our thesis is that practitioners need to consider the child-development-protection and psychiatric
interface in a new preventative and protection paradigm. Rather than consider separate psychiatric diagnoses, psychoses, depression,
personality disorder, alcohol, substance abuse, we urge they are considered as an over-lapping mental health syndrome paradigm
that can improve child development and protection against neglect/abuse. Evidence is that Child-Abuse-Related-Death (CARDs)
assailant’s problems essentially psychological, although compounded by socio-economic factors the majority of assailants had mental
health problems, psychosis or severe personality disorders: Neglect deaths are a minority. We show the mental health problems has a
far higher death rate for young people than CARDS and challenge the concept of a neglect to abuse continuum at the extreme leads
to CARD’s. High UK child mortality is linked to relative poverty which needs a greater societal/political response. Mental health
syndrome paradigm is based on a normative child development perspective, focusing on the often ignored impact parental mental
illness on child’s psychosocial development. Depression, suicidal behavior and mental health problems in adolescents and young
adults are linked to history of adverse childhood, especially parental mental illness, but are ignored until the difficulties subsequently
manifest themselves. The MHSP indicates we need a real integrated inter-agency holistic approach that is intergenerational to more
effectively enhance the child’s development, whilst making them safer.
Biography
Colin Pritchard is Britain’s longest Research Active Social Work Professor, an Emeritus Professor, School of Medicine, University of Southampton involved in
psychiatric training of medical students and psychiatric trainees. His research is very cross disciplinary, publishing recently in
British Journal of Neurosurgery-Social
Work-Cancer, Scandinavian Journal Public Health
and
Journal of Social Work - Community Mental Health
.
cpritchard@bournemouth.ac.ukColin Pritchard, Int J Emerg Ment Health 2017, 19:2(Suppl)
DOI: 10.4172/1522-4821-C1-008