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Issues in Human Services
(HMNS 10085)
Module 2: Issues Pertaining to Youth
What is Youth?
• Adolescence - the years of 10 to 18
• Teenage years - 13-18 years
• Period of time between when puberty begins and
when adulthood is reached
– Menarche
– Semenarche
– Time of rapid growth

• Emerging adulthood 18 to 2 years
The Emergence of Adolescence
as a Stage of Childhood
• Adolescence - recent stage of childhood
– Emerged in 1890s
– Time period when attending school
– This has increased over time

• Cultures vary by expectations on
adolescents- may be based on gender
Issues for Youth
• High Risk Behaviours - aggression/
“delinquent behaviour”, gang activity
– Bullying
– Substance Use

• Mental Health Issues - depression, anxiety,
eating disorders, self-harm/suicide
• Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual/Transgender/Queer
Youth
Classification of Problems
• Externalizing problems:
– Directed towards others

• Internalizing problems:
– Directed inward
Externalizing Problems:
“Delinquent” Behaviour & Violence:
• Criminal activity and violence attract a lot
of attention.
• Youth do commit a disproportionate
number of violent crimes
• Youth - 7% of the overall, general
population
• Youth are 4 times more likely to be victims
of crime - female more than male.
“Delinquent” Behaviour &
Violence:
•
•
•
•
•
•

Problem-solving cognition
Judgement
Connection to disruptive peers
Early maturation (girls)
Values
Witnessing or experiencing violence
Contributors to “Delinquent”
Behaviour & Violence:
• Youth “act out” for a reason
• Conditions within the youth
• Past or present abuse, neglect or chaotic
environments (due to substance abuse)
• Structural risk factors
– Living in poverty > food insecurity,
specifically.
How School Experience May
Contribute
• Teacher insensitivity to a youth’s
individuality
• Rigid discipline
• Continuous negative interactions
• Failing to assess the strengths of youth
• Lack of funding for special education
resources that help promote school success.
Gang Activity: Types of Gangs
•
•
•
•
•

Groups of friends
Spontaneous Criminal Activity Gang
Purposive Gang
Youth Street Gang
Structure Criminal Organization
Myths about gangs:
• Cultural or ethnic groups form gangs
composed of individuals from their own
cultural or racial groups
• Newcomers to Canada frequently form
gangs
• Criminal gangs are composed of youth
What do gangs provide youth?
•
•
•
•
•

Respect
A sense of making a contribution
Potential for leadership
Relief from boredom
Acknowledgement of the youth as a unique
individual
• A feeling of membership, belonging
• A feeling of empowerment
Why gangs tend to form:
•
•
•
•
•

Living in poverty
Unemployment
Racism
Family-oriented difficulties
Not succeeding in school/low attachment to
school
• Chaos in community
Interventions for Youth
Involved in Gangs:
• Structural approach:
– Mobilize a community to take action
– Provide educational, recreational and
employment opportunities
– Social intervention (eg. housing)
Bullying
• Bullying is defined as,
“…a way of attaining power through
aggression.”
• There is intentionality
• Tends to be repetitive in nature
Bullying Behaviour &
Types of Bullying
• Bullying Behaviour:
–
–
–
–
–

Physical
Verbal
Social
Used electronically
Being a bystander

• Types: Racial, religious, sexual & disability
How Often Does it Happen?
• 20% of children & youth report being
bullied.
• Increases in early adolescence
• Decreases in later adolescence
• Boys are bullied more using physical
behaviours
• Girls - more use of exclusion, gossip
behaviours.
Who is particularly at risk:
• Large body type
• Not fitting in with peer group
• Students who have disabilities &/or use
special education services
• Students who are lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender, or queer (LGBTQ)
Impact of being bullied:
•
•
•
•

Anxious and lonely
School avoidance
Illness - depression and suicidal thoughts
Poor academic performance
Who tends to bully?
• Anyone
• Do not possess effective social problemsolving skills
• Considered attractive, popular & leaders in
their school communities
Measures to combat bullying:
•
•
•
•
•

School-based awareness campaigns
Directed to the whole school body
“Norm”
Research evidence - mixed
Raising awareness of the bystander role
Substance Use
• It becomes problematic when:
– habitual
– involves street or illegal drugs
– Interferes with daily life & functioning
How many youth use substances?
• >65% of students had used alcohol (25.3% had
been binge-drinking)
• 29.8% had used cannabis
• >23% smoked tobacco
• 6% used ecstasy
• No substance use > 27.4%
• At least 4 different drugs - 14% of all students
• 5.6% of students - could not stop using
Trends in Youth Substance Use:
• Alcohol & using drugs increasing since the 90s.
–
–
–
–

Some increase in use of most substances
Highest increase - marijuana
Increase in alcohol
Increase in designer drugs or rave drugs (Ecstasy)

• Use of tobacco decreased since 90s.
– Except it has increased in young women
– Highest smoking rate in country
Associated Problems in
Substance Use:
• Use of alcohol, marijuana, cocaine &
amphetamines linked to violent behaviour
• More likely to gamble
• Substance use (alcohol use especially) is
linked to depression
• ADHD diagnoses
Factors Thought to Contribute to
Substance Use:
•
•
•
•

Influenced by peers
Have mothers
Move frequently/school adjustment
Have lower parent supervision & support in single
parent families
• Have parents who are more authoritative &
directing
• Come from households where parents are religious
Individual Characteristics/Resources that
decrease likelihood of substance use in
youth:
•
•
•
•

Good self-concept
Religious beliefs/values
Authoritative parenting
Social support
Mental Health Issues in Youth:
• Externalizing Disorders:
– Conduct Disorder
– Oppositional Defiance Disorder

• Internalizing Disorders:
–
–
–
–
–

Depression
Self-injury
Suicide
Anxiety
Eating disorders

• ~20% of youth have a mental health disorder
Depression:
• Symptoms:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–

Low mood
Feelings of sadness
Crying easily
Loss of interest in activities previously enjoyed
Sleep disturbances
Appetite disturbances
Low energy
Stomach aches or headaches
Diminished memory & ability to concentrate
Youth > irritability

• Interferes with functioning in daily life
Depression: How many youth
does it affect?
• 3.5% of children and youth experience
depression
• Tends to increase in adolescence
• Girls more affected than boys
• Can be difficult to detect
Anxiety
• Anxiety - level is such that it interferes with functioning in
daily life
• Often occurs with depression.
• Impacts ~6% of children & youth
• Types of anxiety disorders:
– Generalized Anxiety-many worries & fears
– Specific Phobia - anxiety response specific to 1 thing > highly
avoidant
– Social Phobia - excessive worry about social situations
– Panic Disorder - physical panic response > “attack”
– Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder - uncontrollable & unreasonable
thoughts (obsessions) & routines/rituals (compulsions)
Factors Contributing to
Depression & Anxiety:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Genetic - runs in family
Early life stress - trauma
Attachment issues
Psychological controlling by parents
Economic problems in household
Low marital happiness in parents
Parental hostility towards you
Reaction to a stressful life event
Self-injurious Behaviour
• “…any deliberate, repetitive attempt to
harm one’s own bodily tissue without a
conscious desire to commit suicide.” (Nock
& Prinstein, 2005, in Martin, 2011).
• Most frequent - cutting legs and arms with
razor blade, burning one’s self.
Prevalence of Self-injurious
Behaviour
• Adolescents are at higher risk for selfinjuring than adults
• 39% of adolescents have self-inflicted
injury at some point in their lifetime
• Female youth self-injure at a much higher
rate.
Causes of Self-injuring
Behaviour
• Causes are unclear
• Associated with:
–
–
–
–
–

Eating Disorders
Depression
Anxiety
Physical, sexual or severe emotional abuse
Being a perfectionist
Reasons for Self-injury
• It allows youth to feel something when they
otherwise feel emotionally numb
• Allows youth to numb psychic pain
• Internal expression of rage or intense anger
• Self-punishment
• Means of getting attention
Eating Disorders
• A group of disorders characterized by a distorted body
image in which eating behaviours are severely restricted or
unhealthy, to alter body weight & shape
– See themselves as fat when dangerously thin

• Primary onset- tends to be adolescence
• Risk for medical problems such as:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–

Infertility
Tooth damage
Heart & kidney problems
Bone loss
Anemia
Premature death
Growth may be halted
Types of Eating Disorders
• Anorexia Nervosa - refusal to maintain expected body
weight (< 85% of normal body weight) through starvation, excessive
exercise, use of diuretics, laxatives. Use of excessive calorie counting,
lack of satisfaction with weight loss, intense fear of gaining weight.
Part of diagnosis - absence of menstrual cycle for 3 months.

• Bulimia Nervosa - binge eating followed by purging
(vomiting, using laxatives). Youth feels no control over the eating
behavior.

• Binge-eating Disorder - Eats excessively to point of
being uncomfortable. Feels highly guilty which can lead to other
binges.
Prevalence
• Anorexia - half to 1% of youth
• Bulimia - 1 to 3% of youth
• Females much more likely to have an eating
disorder
Causes
• Interplay of cultural, genetic & psychological
causes
• Cultural -related to unrealistic body image ideals
• Genetic - predisposition to mental disorders
• Psychological - may have anxiety disorder earlier
in childhood. Low self-esteem, trying to be
“perfect”; family interaction patterns
– Control
Suicide
• The most extreme internalizing disorder
• Adolescents - high risk, females higher
suicidal ideation
• Rate is higher for adolescents than adults
• Rate is growing
Types of Suicidal Behaviour
• Gestures - cry for help vs. attempt with
intent to kill oneself
• Attempts/Completed
• Females - 85% of those who attempt but are
unsuccessful
• Males - 80% of those who complete suicide
Risk Factors for Suicide:
• Youth feeling hopeless, with little social support,
having feelings of hostility & negative self-esteem
> greatest risk
• Strongly linked to family disruption & divorce
• Having a friend commit suicide.
• Having a gun (for males)
• High level of school involvement > associated
with a decreased risk for suicide
Schizophrenia
• Most often diagnosed in late adolescence or
emerging adulthood
• Thought Disorder
• Symptoms:
–
–
–
–
–

Unclear or illogical thinking
Delusions
Hallucinations
Cognitive impairment
Inability to express emotions
Early Signs
• 30 times more likely to commit suicide
• Increased social isolation - especially from
peers
• Declining cognitive functioning - confusing
thoughts
• Indications of hallucinations
Treatment of Mental Health
Disorders:
• Prevention
• Medical treatment
• Cognitive Behavioural Therapy - for
depression, anxiety & eating disorders
• Family therapy
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual,
Transgender/Transexual, Queer
(LGBTQ) Youth
• Often the victims of bullying - 75% of gay youth in one
study reported being verbally abused at school & 14%
reported physical abuse
• 85% of LGBTQ youth reported being victimized by
bullying - 60% report having been assaulted
• Male youth were abused more than female youth
• School climate in which there is heterosexist, homophobic
language used > increased anxiety & depression amongst
LGBTQ youth
– 39.4% heard such remarks from adults in their schools

• High rate of suicide - 30% reported attempting
How to make communities safe
& inclusive for LGBTQ Youth
• Address the harassment - provide education to
school personnel to begin with
• Policies that do not condone harassment based on
LGBTQ status > “Zero Tolerance” policies
• Focus on sexuality as part of youth’s personhood
- not the sole defining factor of a human being
• Teach students to respect the dignity of all persons
Readings:
•

Centre For Addiction & Mental Health (2002). Alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use among Ontario Students. Youth
Scoop, Vol 2. Toronto: Centre For Addiction & Mental Health.

•

Retrieved from: http://www.camh.net/education/Resources_teachers_alcdruguse.pdf.

•

Centre For Addiction & Mental Health (2002). Youth violence: what’s the story? . Youth Scoop, Vol 3. Toronto:
Centre For Addiction & Mental Health.

•

Retrieved from: http://www.camh
.net/education/Resources_teachers_schools/Youth%20Scoop/youth_scoop_violence_youth.pdf

•

Centre For Addiction & Mental Health (2009). Hear me, understand me, support me: what young women want you
to know about depression. Toronto: Centre For Mental Health & Addiction.

•

Retrieved from: http://www.camh.net/Publications/Resources_for_Professionals/Validity/validity_sizism.html

•

Hamilton Wentworth District School Board (____). Bullying: Information for parents and students. In Safe and
Caring Schools #3.

•

Retrieved from: http://www.hwdsb.on.ca/programs/safeschools/bullying/pdfs/bullying_booklet_english.pdf.
Readings continued…
•

Offord Centre For Child Studies (2007). Eating problems in children and adolescence. Hamilton, ON: Centre of
Knowledge on Healthy Child Development.

•

Retrieved from: http://knowledge.offordcentre.com/images/stories/offord/pamphlets/EatingDisorder_en.pdf.

•

Offord Centre For Child Studies (2007). Mood problems in children and adolescents. Hamilton, ON:Centre of
Knowledge on Healthy Child Development.

•

Retrieved from: http://knowledge.offordcentre.com/images/stories/offord/pamphlets/Mood%20B&W.pdf.

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Hmns10085 mod2

  • 1. Issues in Human Services (HMNS 10085) Module 2: Issues Pertaining to Youth
  • 2. What is Youth? • Adolescence - the years of 10 to 18 • Teenage years - 13-18 years • Period of time between when puberty begins and when adulthood is reached – Menarche – Semenarche – Time of rapid growth • Emerging adulthood 18 to 2 years
  • 3. The Emergence of Adolescence as a Stage of Childhood • Adolescence - recent stage of childhood – Emerged in 1890s – Time period when attending school – This has increased over time • Cultures vary by expectations on adolescents- may be based on gender
  • 4. Issues for Youth • High Risk Behaviours - aggression/ “delinquent behaviour”, gang activity – Bullying – Substance Use • Mental Health Issues - depression, anxiety, eating disorders, self-harm/suicide • Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual/Transgender/Queer Youth
  • 5. Classification of Problems • Externalizing problems: – Directed towards others • Internalizing problems: – Directed inward
  • 6. Externalizing Problems: “Delinquent” Behaviour & Violence: • Criminal activity and violence attract a lot of attention. • Youth do commit a disproportionate number of violent crimes • Youth - 7% of the overall, general population • Youth are 4 times more likely to be victims of crime - female more than male.
  • 7. “Delinquent” Behaviour & Violence: • • • • • • Problem-solving cognition Judgement Connection to disruptive peers Early maturation (girls) Values Witnessing or experiencing violence
  • 8. Contributors to “Delinquent” Behaviour & Violence: • Youth “act out” for a reason • Conditions within the youth • Past or present abuse, neglect or chaotic environments (due to substance abuse) • Structural risk factors – Living in poverty > food insecurity, specifically.
  • 9. How School Experience May Contribute • Teacher insensitivity to a youth’s individuality • Rigid discipline • Continuous negative interactions • Failing to assess the strengths of youth • Lack of funding for special education resources that help promote school success.
  • 10. Gang Activity: Types of Gangs • • • • • Groups of friends Spontaneous Criminal Activity Gang Purposive Gang Youth Street Gang Structure Criminal Organization
  • 11. Myths about gangs: • Cultural or ethnic groups form gangs composed of individuals from their own cultural or racial groups • Newcomers to Canada frequently form gangs • Criminal gangs are composed of youth
  • 12. What do gangs provide youth? • • • • • Respect A sense of making a contribution Potential for leadership Relief from boredom Acknowledgement of the youth as a unique individual • A feeling of membership, belonging • A feeling of empowerment
  • 13. Why gangs tend to form: • • • • • Living in poverty Unemployment Racism Family-oriented difficulties Not succeeding in school/low attachment to school • Chaos in community
  • 14. Interventions for Youth Involved in Gangs: • Structural approach: – Mobilize a community to take action – Provide educational, recreational and employment opportunities – Social intervention (eg. housing)
  • 15. Bullying • Bullying is defined as, “…a way of attaining power through aggression.” • There is intentionality • Tends to be repetitive in nature
  • 16. Bullying Behaviour & Types of Bullying • Bullying Behaviour: – – – – – Physical Verbal Social Used electronically Being a bystander • Types: Racial, religious, sexual & disability
  • 17. How Often Does it Happen? • 20% of children & youth report being bullied. • Increases in early adolescence • Decreases in later adolescence • Boys are bullied more using physical behaviours • Girls - more use of exclusion, gossip behaviours.
  • 18. Who is particularly at risk: • Large body type • Not fitting in with peer group • Students who have disabilities &/or use special education services • Students who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ)
  • 19. Impact of being bullied: • • • • Anxious and lonely School avoidance Illness - depression and suicidal thoughts Poor academic performance
  • 20. Who tends to bully? • Anyone • Do not possess effective social problemsolving skills • Considered attractive, popular & leaders in their school communities
  • 21. Measures to combat bullying: • • • • • School-based awareness campaigns Directed to the whole school body “Norm” Research evidence - mixed Raising awareness of the bystander role
  • 22. Substance Use • It becomes problematic when: – habitual – involves street or illegal drugs – Interferes with daily life & functioning
  • 23. How many youth use substances? • >65% of students had used alcohol (25.3% had been binge-drinking) • 29.8% had used cannabis • >23% smoked tobacco • 6% used ecstasy • No substance use > 27.4% • At least 4 different drugs - 14% of all students • 5.6% of students - could not stop using
  • 24. Trends in Youth Substance Use: • Alcohol & using drugs increasing since the 90s. – – – – Some increase in use of most substances Highest increase - marijuana Increase in alcohol Increase in designer drugs or rave drugs (Ecstasy) • Use of tobacco decreased since 90s. – Except it has increased in young women – Highest smoking rate in country
  • 25. Associated Problems in Substance Use: • Use of alcohol, marijuana, cocaine & amphetamines linked to violent behaviour • More likely to gamble • Substance use (alcohol use especially) is linked to depression • ADHD diagnoses
  • 26. Factors Thought to Contribute to Substance Use: • • • • Influenced by peers Have mothers Move frequently/school adjustment Have lower parent supervision & support in single parent families • Have parents who are more authoritative & directing • Come from households where parents are religious
  • 27. Individual Characteristics/Resources that decrease likelihood of substance use in youth: • • • • Good self-concept Religious beliefs/values Authoritative parenting Social support
  • 28. Mental Health Issues in Youth: • Externalizing Disorders: – Conduct Disorder – Oppositional Defiance Disorder • Internalizing Disorders: – – – – – Depression Self-injury Suicide Anxiety Eating disorders • ~20% of youth have a mental health disorder
  • 29. Depression: • Symptoms: – – – – – – – – – – Low mood Feelings of sadness Crying easily Loss of interest in activities previously enjoyed Sleep disturbances Appetite disturbances Low energy Stomach aches or headaches Diminished memory & ability to concentrate Youth > irritability • Interferes with functioning in daily life
  • 30. Depression: How many youth does it affect? • 3.5% of children and youth experience depression • Tends to increase in adolescence • Girls more affected than boys • Can be difficult to detect
  • 31. Anxiety • Anxiety - level is such that it interferes with functioning in daily life • Often occurs with depression. • Impacts ~6% of children & youth • Types of anxiety disorders: – Generalized Anxiety-many worries & fears – Specific Phobia - anxiety response specific to 1 thing > highly avoidant – Social Phobia - excessive worry about social situations – Panic Disorder - physical panic response > “attack” – Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder - uncontrollable & unreasonable thoughts (obsessions) & routines/rituals (compulsions)
  • 32. Factors Contributing to Depression & Anxiety: • • • • • • • • Genetic - runs in family Early life stress - trauma Attachment issues Psychological controlling by parents Economic problems in household Low marital happiness in parents Parental hostility towards you Reaction to a stressful life event
  • 33. Self-injurious Behaviour • “…any deliberate, repetitive attempt to harm one’s own bodily tissue without a conscious desire to commit suicide.” (Nock & Prinstein, 2005, in Martin, 2011). • Most frequent - cutting legs and arms with razor blade, burning one’s self.
  • 34. Prevalence of Self-injurious Behaviour • Adolescents are at higher risk for selfinjuring than adults • 39% of adolescents have self-inflicted injury at some point in their lifetime • Female youth self-injure at a much higher rate.
  • 35. Causes of Self-injuring Behaviour • Causes are unclear • Associated with: – – – – – Eating Disorders Depression Anxiety Physical, sexual or severe emotional abuse Being a perfectionist
  • 36. Reasons for Self-injury • It allows youth to feel something when they otherwise feel emotionally numb • Allows youth to numb psychic pain • Internal expression of rage or intense anger • Self-punishment • Means of getting attention
  • 37. Eating Disorders • A group of disorders characterized by a distorted body image in which eating behaviours are severely restricted or unhealthy, to alter body weight & shape – See themselves as fat when dangerously thin • Primary onset- tends to be adolescence • Risk for medical problems such as: – – – – – – – Infertility Tooth damage Heart & kidney problems Bone loss Anemia Premature death Growth may be halted
  • 38. Types of Eating Disorders • Anorexia Nervosa - refusal to maintain expected body weight (< 85% of normal body weight) through starvation, excessive exercise, use of diuretics, laxatives. Use of excessive calorie counting, lack of satisfaction with weight loss, intense fear of gaining weight. Part of diagnosis - absence of menstrual cycle for 3 months. • Bulimia Nervosa - binge eating followed by purging (vomiting, using laxatives). Youth feels no control over the eating behavior. • Binge-eating Disorder - Eats excessively to point of being uncomfortable. Feels highly guilty which can lead to other binges.
  • 39. Prevalence • Anorexia - half to 1% of youth • Bulimia - 1 to 3% of youth • Females much more likely to have an eating disorder
  • 40. Causes • Interplay of cultural, genetic & psychological causes • Cultural -related to unrealistic body image ideals • Genetic - predisposition to mental disorders • Psychological - may have anxiety disorder earlier in childhood. Low self-esteem, trying to be “perfect”; family interaction patterns – Control
  • 41.
  • 42. Suicide • The most extreme internalizing disorder • Adolescents - high risk, females higher suicidal ideation • Rate is higher for adolescents than adults • Rate is growing
  • 43. Types of Suicidal Behaviour • Gestures - cry for help vs. attempt with intent to kill oneself • Attempts/Completed • Females - 85% of those who attempt but are unsuccessful • Males - 80% of those who complete suicide
  • 44. Risk Factors for Suicide: • Youth feeling hopeless, with little social support, having feelings of hostility & negative self-esteem > greatest risk • Strongly linked to family disruption & divorce • Having a friend commit suicide. • Having a gun (for males) • High level of school involvement > associated with a decreased risk for suicide
  • 45. Schizophrenia • Most often diagnosed in late adolescence or emerging adulthood • Thought Disorder • Symptoms: – – – – – Unclear or illogical thinking Delusions Hallucinations Cognitive impairment Inability to express emotions
  • 46. Early Signs • 30 times more likely to commit suicide • Increased social isolation - especially from peers • Declining cognitive functioning - confusing thoughts • Indications of hallucinations
  • 47. Treatment of Mental Health Disorders: • Prevention • Medical treatment • Cognitive Behavioural Therapy - for depression, anxiety & eating disorders • Family therapy
  • 48. Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender/Transexual, Queer (LGBTQ) Youth • Often the victims of bullying - 75% of gay youth in one study reported being verbally abused at school & 14% reported physical abuse • 85% of LGBTQ youth reported being victimized by bullying - 60% report having been assaulted • Male youth were abused more than female youth • School climate in which there is heterosexist, homophobic language used > increased anxiety & depression amongst LGBTQ youth – 39.4% heard such remarks from adults in their schools • High rate of suicide - 30% reported attempting
  • 49. How to make communities safe & inclusive for LGBTQ Youth • Address the harassment - provide education to school personnel to begin with • Policies that do not condone harassment based on LGBTQ status > “Zero Tolerance” policies • Focus on sexuality as part of youth’s personhood - not the sole defining factor of a human being • Teach students to respect the dignity of all persons
  • 50. Readings: • Centre For Addiction & Mental Health (2002). Alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use among Ontario Students. Youth Scoop, Vol 2. Toronto: Centre For Addiction & Mental Health. • Retrieved from: http://www.camh.net/education/Resources_teachers_alcdruguse.pdf. • Centre For Addiction & Mental Health (2002). Youth violence: what’s the story? . Youth Scoop, Vol 3. Toronto: Centre For Addiction & Mental Health. • Retrieved from: http://www.camh .net/education/Resources_teachers_schools/Youth%20Scoop/youth_scoop_violence_youth.pdf • Centre For Addiction & Mental Health (2009). Hear me, understand me, support me: what young women want you to know about depression. Toronto: Centre For Mental Health & Addiction. • Retrieved from: http://www.camh.net/Publications/Resources_for_Professionals/Validity/validity_sizism.html • Hamilton Wentworth District School Board (____). Bullying: Information for parents and students. In Safe and Caring Schools #3. • Retrieved from: http://www.hwdsb.on.ca/programs/safeschools/bullying/pdfs/bullying_booklet_english.pdf.
  • 51. Readings continued… • Offord Centre For Child Studies (2007). Eating problems in children and adolescence. Hamilton, ON: Centre of Knowledge on Healthy Child Development. • Retrieved from: http://knowledge.offordcentre.com/images/stories/offord/pamphlets/EatingDisorder_en.pdf. • Offord Centre For Child Studies (2007). Mood problems in children and adolescents. Hamilton, ON:Centre of Knowledge on Healthy Child Development. • Retrieved from: http://knowledge.offordcentre.com/images/stories/offord/pamphlets/Mood%20B&W.pdf.

Notes de l'éditeur

  1. Swearer, et al (2010).