Introduction to Project CATCH-IT

Welcome to Project CATCH-IT! Your child has just started a six-week Internet program to reduce the risk of major depression and to improve relationship and coping skills. With your help, your child can use the skills Project CATCH-IT offers to make the most out of the exciting and often challenging process of becoming an adult.

What does Project CATCH-IT teach?

Project CATCH-IT is broken up into three sections, each of which provides its own set of skills. Each of these three sections is further broken up into “modules”.  The “modules” provide key lessons, further explain those lessons with helpful examples, and encourage your child to think about the lesson with a set of exercises.  Here are the three sections:

  • Behavioral Activation (“BA”): This section teaches your child to think about the habits and behaviors they have, and the way those behaviors can affect their thoughts and feelings. A big part of depression shows up in the way a person acts: people with depression typically eat too little or too much, have problems getting the right amount of sleep, and spend less time doing things that they enjoy. By encouraging your child to pursue more pleasant activities, and by teaching them to spot and fix behavioral “bad habits” that cause down mood, the BA section can work to quickly improve mood without focusing too much on depressing thoughts or feelings.

  • Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (“CBT”): This section, which uses the same concepts and techniques that most “talk therapy” uses, teaches your child to think about the negative thoughts they have which cause depressed moods. People with depression often have “automatic” negative thoughts (“Nobody likes me,” “I must be stupid”) that causes them to look at their lives and what happens to them in an overly negative way. CBT will teach your child how to spot and fix these negative thoughts so they can feel better and live more positively; they will also learn valuable problem-solving skills to get through difficult situations.

  • Interpersonal Therapy (“IPT”): This section will teach your child to better understand and then improve how they relate to friends, family, and other people. They can learn such things as: what their “talking style” is, and what are the benefits of talking to others calmly, coolly, and directly; how to solve relationship problems; and how to deal with difficult life changes such as going to college or starting/beginning a relationship. IPT can teach your child “relationship skills” that are vital for preventing depression and for succeeding in the transition to adulthood.

 

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