The Reframe
Mental health treatment for young people has changed dramatically over the last two decades, but are today’s approaches helping or unintentionally keeping families stuck? In this episode of The Reframe, host Doug Bodin is joined by Dr. Laura Dunn, Chair of Psychiatry at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) and Director of the UAMS Psychiatric Research Institute, for a thoughtful conversation about the evolving landscape of adolescent and young adult mental health care. Dr. Dunn also happens to be Doug’s sister, bringing an added layer of familiarity and candor to the discussion. Drawing on decades of experience and their shared background in family systems thinking, Doug and Dr. Dunn explore the rise of “slow motion crises” among young people, the impact of technology and overaccommodation, and why families often struggle to recognize when support has turned into enabling. They also discuss the evolution of therapeutic consulting, shifting cultural attitudes around mental health, the value of experiential and mentoring-based interventions, and why building confidence often starts with helping young people reconnect with the real world. Listen in for a thoughtful conversation about parenting, treatment, and the changing architecture of care. Key Points From This Episode: * Introducing Dr. Laura Dunn and her perspective on modern mental health care. * Why therapeutic consulting requires a “360-degree” family systems approach. * How family systems often get overlooked in traditional treatment models. * Why many clinicians struggle to address family dynamics in practice. * Acting in vs. acting out: how adolescent behavior has shifted over time. * From risk-taking to isolation: the rise of “slow motion” crises. * How technology and the pandemic reshaped adolescent development. * Hope and fear: the “twin pillars” of codependency in families. * The growing challenge of “failure to launch” in young adults. * Why overaccommodation can unintentionally keep young adults stuck. * The role discomfort and autonomy play in building resilience. * How “slow motion relational interventions” help families create change. * Why consistency, cohesion, and accountability matter for parents. * The debate around overdiagnosis, accommodations, and mental health treatment. * How mental health labels can become part of a young person’s identity. * Key ways mentoring helps young people build confidence through real-world action. * What was lost in the decline of wilderness therapy programs. * Why treatment works best as part of a larger long-term care blueprint. Links Mentioned in Today’s Episode: Laura Dunn on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/geriatricpsych/] Douglas Bodin [https://thebodingroup.com/dougbodin] The Bodin Group [https://thebodingroup.com/]
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