Sections
Conceptual Overview of Treatment: Identification and Management of Stressors | Psychotherapy | Pharmacotherapy | Management Considerations | Conclusion | References
Excerpt
The overriding conceptual issue that underlies treatment intervention
is the knowledge that an adjustment disorder emanates from a psychological
reaction to a stressor. The etiological vector in the genesis of
the disorder—the stressor—needs to be identified,
described, and shared with the patient, and plans must be made to
mitigate the stressor, if possible. The maladaptive response may
be attenuated if the stress can be eliminated, reduced, or accommodated.
Therefore, the initial approach to treatment is to identify the
stressor. Popkin et al. (1990) demonstrated that in
medically ill persons, the most common stressor precipitating an
adjustment disorder diagnosis is the medical illness itself. In
children, of whom up to 70% in psychiatric inpatient and
ambulatory settings may receive this diagnosis, the stressor may
be developmental demands, school problems, family conflicts, peer
difficulties, cognitive and/or emotional inability to master
expected tasks, and so on (D. Schaffer, personal communication,
September 1990). Fifty-five percent of child psychiatrist respondents
to a questionnaire regarding DSM-III-R (American Psychiatric Association 1987) admitted to diagnosing adjustment disorder
to avoid the stigma associated with other disorders (Setterberg et al. 1991).