Behavioral Consult

Kids and Divorce: A Long-Term Commitment


 

pdnews@elsevier.com

Divorce is so common in the United States – ending about half of all marriages – that it will affect many patients and families in your practice. If your practice has about 2,000 children and adolescents from about 1,500 families, for example, hundreds of families will be dealing with predivorce marital tension, the divorce itself, or postdivorce concerns.

Start by screening for family functioning at every annual visit. Specifically, try to identify strife and stress early on, at a time when your inventions have the greatest preventive impact. Ask open-ended questions such as, “How are things going in the family?” or “Is there any tension or discord in the family or in the marriage?”

I recommend using the broader term “discord” because it will pick up a pending divorce and also identify other family stressors for the child. For example, research indicates that the years of arguing and fighting that often precede divorce may be more damaging to the child in the long term than the divorce itself.

Once you identify marital or family stress, strive for the following three long-term goals to optimize a healthy outcome for the child.

▸ First, make sure the child continues to function well in school, with peers, in activities, and in areas of self-esteem. The firr certain key signs that a child is not functioning well. Persistently lower school performance is one sign. Most children are't concentrate or perform as well at school in the year of the divorce, but it is a warning sign if the problems persist. Determine whether the child is still having difficulty adjusting to the divorce, and assess if there is ongoing discord or fighting about visitation, custody, child rearing, or finances after the divorce. Another warning sign is the child who drops an after-school activity during a divorce crisis, and fails to retume itin the next school year.

How a child relates to friends after the divorce can be important. In particular, ascertain how young or midadolescents treat members of the opposite sex. Look for patterns in their relationships that repeat some of the dysfunctional behaviors of their parents' marriage. Keep in mind that children are often unaware that they are repeating these family patterns.

For example, are girls who are adversely affected by divorce especially vulnerable to getting involved with older teenagers who might take advantage of them? Do you see any evidence of longing in the girls, or signs that they are seeking to replace something missing in their paternal relationship? This type of behavior is much less likely if the girl has had a good relationship with her father before, during, and after the divorce.

With teenage boys, consider how they treat their girlfriends. Is the boy supportive in his relationships, or does he have girlfriend after girlfriend because of a callous or insensitive attitude?

Referral for a mental health evaluation might be appropriate if you see a pattern of continuing dysfunction in a major area of the child's life or of unsatisfactory relationships as these younger teenagers enter high school, particularly if they are alienated from a parent.

▸ Second, ensure that parents are open and willing to answer the child's questions as the child tries to make sense of the divorce at each developmental stage. Help postdivorce families encourage the child to ask questions on an ongoing basis. If divorce happened when the child was a toddler, for example, they are going to have questions 5, 10, and 15 years later that they could not conceptualize until they reached the appropriate developmental point.

Parents may need your advice on how best to talk to their 5- or 8-year-old, a time when information should be concrete and straightforward. In contrast, a 14-year-old may be able to understand more conceptual and nuanced answers to their questions. For example, a younger child is unlikely to think about the divorce in terms of an extramarital affair or the impact on their college finances, but that may not be the case when the child is 14 or 15 years old. Keep in mind that many adolescents do not ask parents such difficult questions unless they are given permission in advance, and it's at a time when they feel safe and at ease.

▸ Third, counsel the family to facilitate a good relationship between the child and each parent over the long term. When families come to me and there is a lot of tension about visitation, custody, and money, I often focus them on the long-term goals. I ask, “What kind of relationship do you want with your child 10 and 15 years from now?”; “What is likely to result in a good long-term relationship with them?”; “Do you want to be able to be at their wedding?”; “Do you want to be close to your grandchildren?” Going all out for an extra few hours of visitation or not paying a bill is not likely to help achieve these long-term goals.

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