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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, October 15, 2001 |
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'Parenting has become a challenge'
By Our Staff Reporter
THRISSUR, OCT. 14. Child rearing in a normal way has become an
extremely challenging and complex task in the fast-changing
contemporary society, according to Dr. Shobha Srinath of NIMHANS,
Bangalore.
"In the contemporary society you cannot afford to think that the
child will grow just like that unlike in the past. Parents have
to put in hard work for child rearing now. For this the parents
will have to have a deep insight into both the child's nature,
and their own nature," Dr. Shobha, who was here to attend the
South Zone conference of the Indian Psychiatric Society, told The
Hindu.
In the past, the children could have the company of the numerous
people within the family and could go to the neighbours' place
for interactions. There was a lot of physical activity then when
the children used to climb tree, run around and engage in
collective plays that involve lot of body movements.
Now the child has far too many mental distractions like the TV,
video and going for movies. Most of the children are growing up
in nuclear families where both the parents are working and have
very little time to spend with the child. Also, there is
tremendous pressure on the child because of the competitive
atmosphere in society. The children want to learn lot of things,
but in such a situation they are not able to learn them in an
interpersonal context.
Therefore, the child thinks that the happiest way to escape from
the stresses and hassles of day to day life is to seek refuge in
the TV. Even when the parents spent time with the child, it is in
a supervisory or advisory mode, which again makes the child
disturbed.
More than the length of the time that we spent with the child it
is the quality of the time that is important. The children must
feel that the parents enjoy spending time with them even if they
are not the first in the class. What is the point in making your
child an IAS officer if he or she is not contended person, and
curses the parents throughout the life?.
The responsibility of caring the children which is a highly
demanding task should be shared by both the parents. If one of
the parents is absent, it will be a stressful task on the other
and only people with high level of mental and physical health
will be able to successfully perform it.
The four ingredients of good parenting are nurturing,
protecting, disciplining and ensuring good communication. In the
Indian context, the parents are either strong disciplinarians or
over-protective. In most of the cases they are seen less capable
of developing healthy communication with the children.
The parents should realise that the child is an individual in
his or her own right with specific natures, and the strategy of
parenting should be devised by taking into account of this
natural traits.
Hyperactivity
Dr. Shobha said one to two per cent of the school children were
found to be suffering from the Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADHD) which gets manifested in the children in the form
of inability to concentrate on any things for a reasonable
period. Children affected by this disorder can be seen to be
fidgety and picking up frequent quarrels with peers in the class
rooms.
In the case of ADHD, all the three symptoms, hyperactivity,
distractibility and impulsiveness should be found together at
significant level for a long period, causing disability which
means the child is not able to perform at levels expected of him
or her. Also, the symptoms should be all-pervasive, they could be
detected at all places including home, class rooms, and in peer
groups.
The children with this disability can be seen to be having
social interaction problems and may find themselves ostracised
from all kinds of companies. Eventually this will lead to
reduction in their self-esteem. There can be some co-occurring
problems like specific learning disabilities among such children.
Emphasising that this disorder is mainly a biological problem
triggered off by the changes in the neuro-chemistry in the brain,
Dr. Shobha said this can be caused by birth trauma, environmental
factors and toxic elements.
Treatment of this disorder will be a long drawn out process and
it is important to isolate it from other forms of mental
problems. If treated with the help of experts it can be corrected
to a great extent. Recently drugs have been made available for
improving the concentration of the children affected with such
disorders in certain select outlets, but they should be used
judiciously and strictly under medical supervision.
Nearly 50 per cent of the children with this disorder are found
to be suffering from its symptoms in the adolescence and
adulthood while 25 to 40 per cent were found to be developing
delinquent behaviour and substance (alcohol and drug) abuse, if
not followed up with proper treatment.
The paper presented by Dr. Shobha along with Dr. Sathish
Girimaji of NIMHANS at the Psychiatric Society conference also
discussed the methods to be used for treating the children with
extreme obstinacy and other forms of oppositional behaviours
using simple behavioural techniques.
About 400 psychiatrists from all the four South Indian States
are attending the conference.
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