Saturday, January 22, 2011

Screen Teens for Mental Health Problems Will Save Lives

The American Academy of Pediatrics is advocating that teens receive a simple mental health screening once a year. The screening can be administered in schools, at annual physical exams, or other health care problems. The TeenScreen national Center for Mental Health Check Ups at Columbia University has designed a five to ten minute questionnaire for 11 to 19 year olds using a brief questionnaire,. With 11 percent of the nations youth suffering from a diagnosable mental disorder , only 20 percent receive mental health services. The screening is designed to identify mental health disorders that might otherwise go undetected in teens, including anxiety, depression, and addictions.


Click here to download a brochure describing the TeenScreen program: http://www.teenscreen.org

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Protect Your Child From the Choking Game

Q: I just read about the Choking Game, and I’m wondering if my 14 year old son, who has ADHD, is more likely to play this game. What should I do to prevent this?

You are right to be concerned about your son. He is right in the target age of children who play the Choking Game which is early adolescence, 11-15. Although there are no studies to suggest that ADHD kids are more likely to play this game, it is common for ADHD kids to have poor judgment and to be more influenced by peers who are engaging in this potentially harmful activity. All kinds of kids play the Choking Game, but ADHD kids may be more at risk.

Of course the Choking Game is not really a game at all. Also called Roulette, Rising Sun, Space Monkey, the Tingling Game, and the Pass Out Game, young teens try this activity to get a high by cutting off oxygen to the brain, and then experiencing a rush as the blood begins to flow again. Teens may literally choke each other with their hands, push each other’s chests to expel air and hyperventilate , or use a belt or a rope to restrict their airways.

The Choking Game is most often played in groups, but it is most dangerous when kids try to play when they are alone, often tying a rope to a bed post or closet rod, and unintentionally strangling themselves. It only takes 3 or 4 minutes of oxygen deprivation to start killing brain cells, and death occurs in as little as four or five minutes.

There are some obvious signs that kids are playing the Choking Game, including red marks around the neck, bloodshot eyes, frequent headaches, and belts or ropes tied to a bedpost or closet rod. But most kids are good at hiding secrets from their parents, so don’t think that a lack of obvious signs means that your child is not in danger.

Ironically, many teens think that the Choking Game is a “natural” high, safer than drugs or alcohol. But in reality, it can be even more dangerous. An estimated 250 to 1,000 children die each year from playing the Choking Game, but many more children get concussions from falling down or have seizures when their brains have been deprived of oxygen.

So what can you do to prevent your child from experimenting with the Choking Game?
There are four simple steps:

1. Eat dinner with your children. Statistics tell us that teens who eat dinner with families at least three times a week, are much less likely to engage in all kind of high risk behaviors.

2. Talk to your child about the Choking Game. Don’t be an inquisitor, but rather begin the conversation saying something like: “I just heard about the Choking Game on TV. It sounds like a lot of kids do this. Have you heard about any kids trying it?” Whatever your child’s answers, calmly explain how serious this activity can be, and how you hope that your child will never take this kind of foolish risk.

3. Teach kids how to be assertive if they are pressured into playing the Choking Game or any dangerous activity. Ask your child if she has ever been pressured to do something she didn’t want to do, and then role-play how she would respond. Also teach your child to be assertive in telling other kids not to engage in this dangerous activity and talking to an adult if they are concerned about a friend or even an acquaintance.

4. Make sure that your school has a prevention program which includes teaching kids about the Choking Game. School prevention programs work! Make sure that your school has a trained teacher or counselor regularly talking to kids about all the problems that affect kids and teens.