Advice: Its Hard For
Parents To Understand
In a new book, Dr. Harold
Koplewicz helps families sort out normal adolescent irritability from real
illness
As the
founder and director of the New York University Child Study Center, Dr. Harold
Koplewicz has seen firsthand the pain that depression brings to families. His
new book, More Than Moody: Recognizing and Treating Adolescent
Depression, describes current therapeutic approaches and new
research.
How does depression manifest itself
differently in teens and adults?
Depressed teenagers are more reactive to the
environment than depressed adults. In addition, they act irritable. In
classical depression, you are
depressed allor almost allof the time. Depressed teens moods
are much more changeable. If an adult male gets depressed and you take him to a
party, he is still depressed. In fact, he may depress others at the party. A
teenage boy who is depressed and gets taken to a party might brighten, might
actually want to have sex. If pursued, he might enjoy himself. But if he goes
home alone, he is likely to become very depressed again. These mood changes are
very hard for parents to understand.
Most teenagers are moody. When should
parents start to worry?
Parents have to know their children.
Adolescence is not a good time to introduce yourself. Money should have been
put in the bank earlier. Then, during adolescence, its a continuation of
a close relationship. You understand what your childs sleep habits are
like, what his energy level is like, what her concentration is like, so you can
observe when changes in usual behavior last for a month. Then I would get an
evaluation.
What would you tell parents who feel guilty
when their children are depressed?
Parents want their children to be happy so
much that they feel somehow responsible if their child is not. I would
emphasize that depression is a real illness. Depression [is] such a misused
term. Were not talking about demoralization, or about being dispirited.
Were talking about a real illness that has neurobiological underpinnings
and that parents have to take as seriously as diabetes.
Where should parents go for help? Do you
think there are enough resources?
There are so many barriers to getting a
teenager help. In our nation, its nothing less than a tragedy that only
one out of five teenagers who suffer from depression gets any help. Its
even worse if you are a kid from a lower socioeconomic group. The first thing
to do would be to go to your pediatrician or your school psychologist who can
refer you to a child psychiatrist or a child psychologist. Diagnosis is the
most important issue here. I would explore the Web site of the American Academy
of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and get the name of a board-certified child
psychiatrist. I would go to a university-affiliated medical center. I would
call the local medical school. I would go to the American Psychological
Association and ask for a child psychologist. After the diagnosis, I would ask
for a treatment plan, keeping in mind that more than one approach can work.
There is talk therapy, specifically cognitive behavioral therapy and
interpersonal therapy, which requires specialized training and has been shown
to be effective. Medications can also work.
Are the medications normally prescribed
safe for developing brains?
Weve been using these drugs for many
years, but there is still a question out there. I think the benefits outweigh
the risks. The jury is still out, but some animal studies have even shown that
taking the medication may actually prevent future episodes of depression, but
this is all preliminary. Parents also need to be informed about the risk of not
taking medicine. Were starting to learn that with each successive
episode, patients are more at risk for another depressive episode. Each episode may affect brain
development negatively. Therefore, the benefits of taking medication outweigh
the risks. There are real costs to the illness which should affect how we think
about the risks of treatment.
Whats the biggest myth about teens and
depression?
I think we still have trouble believing that
children and teenagers can get
depressed. Twenty years ago, the prevailing theory was that depression in
teens, like moodiness, was normal and that teenagers who werent depressed
were abnormal. Now we know thats not accurate. Another myth: depression
is reserved for the poor. It turns out to be an equal-opportunity
disorder.
This article appeared in the Oct. 7, 2002
issue of Newsweek
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