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Living With Conduct Disorder

Diagnosed in adolescence or childhood, the mental disorder known as conduct disorder presents itself in a pattern of persistent and repetitive behavior and in which major age-appropriative norms or others' fundamental rights are violated. Often, these behaviors are known as antisocial behaviors. Antisocial personality disorder, which cannot be diagnosed until an individual is eighteen years old, is often seen as the next step after a childhood or adolescence with conduct disorder. It was thought to affect an estimated 51.1 million individuals worldwide as recently as 2013. Doctors group symptoms into four categories: destructive behavior such as vandalism, rule violations including truancy, deceitfulness that includes lying and shoplifting, and aggression such as bullying and animal cruelty. The following help individuals and their loved ones deal with life with conduct disorder.

Psychotherapy

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Conduct disorder instills negative attitudes that complicate treatment. Because of this, psychotherapy is often an undertaking that lasts for long periods, with the child's entire support network, especially the family, brought into the process. In most cases, when conduct disorder is diagnosed as early as possible, the child's condition succeeds more strongly with therapy. This is for twofold reasons: the child gets to learn a more successful means of communicating with the world as a whole, while the family and support network learn the best way to interact with the child successfully. Behavior therapists have discovered children's thoughts are as important to correct as their actual behavior is. Children with thoughts that are overgeneralized, wrong, or an understanding of circumstances that are otherwise exaggerated, can lead to a greater likelihood of misbehaving.

In cases with younger children, the treatment for conduct disorder can have apparent similarities to treatment for oppositional defiant disorder, which includes parent management training. Keep reading for more on this.

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