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131015P - ADOLESCENT HEALTH (PHYSICAL AND PSYCHOSOCIAL): ETHICO-LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS

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Paper written by Omar Hasan Kasule DrPH, Faculty of Medicine King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh


Abstract

This paper discusses Health problems of adolescents (13-19 years) from the perspective of the five purposes of the Law, maqasid al shari’at. The purpose of protection of diin, maqsadhifdh al ddiin, relates to adolescent identity crises, role ambiguity, and marginalizing spirituality. The purpose of protection of life, maqsadhifdh alnafs, relates to protecting and promoting physical health of adolescents.This purpose also relates to the limited competence of adolescents in medical decisions due to an immature brain. The purpose of protecting progeny, maqsadhifdh al nasl, relates to sexual and reproductive health education for adolescents. The purpose of protecting the mind, maqsadhifdh al ‘aql, relates to adolescent problems of depression, suicide, para-suicide, addictions (nicotine, alcohol, and drugs), and juvenile delinquency. The paper suggests social engineering practical measures to deal with adolescent problems consisting of cognitive approaches, faith (iman) therapy, early marriage with contraception, living in extended family for psychological support and enhancing youth esteem.


Introduction to adolescence
The stages of the human life span are childhood, tufuulat; youth, shabaab; middle age, sinn al shudd;,[1]and old age, shaykhuukha[2]. Youth is divided into 2 stages: adolescence 13-19 years, and young adulthood 20-40 years. Adolescence starting at puberty is a rapid, complex, and difficult adaptive and adjustive changes in physically (height, weight, primary and secondary sexual characteristics) and behaviorally (emotions, thoughts, behavior, psychological, social, and moral). In the past the transition from childhood to adulthood was rapid and painless so that by about 15 years children became adults with puberty being a mark of adulthood. Today we have prolonged childhood up to the age of 20 and more with a long transition full of psychosocial problems.

Methods
Adolescent health problems and associated factors were classified and discussed under the 5 purposes of the Law, maqasid al shari’at[3], to provide an intellectual context for their further analysis and solution. The 5 purposes are: protection of diin, hifdh al ddiin; protection of life, hifdh al nafs; protection of progeny, hifdh al nasl; protection of the mind, hifdh al ‘aql; and protection of wealth, hifdh al maal.

The purpose of protecting diin, maqsadhifdh al ddiin
The identity and role ambiguity with associated tensions and imbalancesin adolescents are due to imperfect internalization of ddiin. The solution to these problems is by a cognitive approach and an iman restoration therapy approach[4]. The cognitive approach consists of equipping the adolescents with a world view based on the Qur’an, ru’uyatkawniyyatqur’aniyyat[5] that consists of six elements. The first element is to understand the integration, takaamul, of the cosmos that everything relates to everything else and that we cannot deal with a problem in isolation. The adolescent cannot handle his or her affairs without reference to other considerations in society. The second element is to appreciate that approaches to problems must be comprehensive, shumuuli.We cannot successfully solve a problem without taking into consideration all related factors thus adolescent problems have to be approached in a multi-disciplinary way. The third element is to seek the golden mean and avoid extremes in dealing with any adolescent problem. This involves balance, mizan,and equilibrium, e’itidaal. The fourth element is to understand the action-reaction phenomenon, tadafu’u, so that the adolescent considers the potential reaction to his or her actions before taking any action. Many adolescent problems arise from precipitate actions based on emotions and drives without clarity of vision. The fifth element is to build the adolescent’s self-esteem as that will strengthen the will to resist negative temptations through an understanding of human responsibility and accountability of vicegerancy, khilafat. The adolescent will maintain the highest standards of conduct appropriate to the role of khilafat. The sixth element is to understand the adolescent’s civilizational responsibility that starts with all creation being placed at the service of the human, taskhiir, so that he can build a physical civilization, ‘imarat al ardh.  Strengthening and / or restoring the faith (iman) of the adolescent is necessary at all times to ensure that he/she can stand up again whenever moral weaknesses overpowers him or her.

A clear world-view will enable the adolescent to navigate many problems such as identity, self-knowledge, tension due to change, and compensation for the biological immaturity of the brain. The concept of takamul enables the adolescent avoid the child-adult dichotomy by understanding that it is one integrated continuum with roles and responsibilities changing in a smooth and gradual transition from childhood to adulthood. The same concept will also enable the adolescent to understand that the changing roles and responsibilities of dependence and independence as he changes from a child to an adult are all part of an integrated social system. The same concept will also enable the adolescent to avoid the crisis of balancing between identifying with peers and identifying with parents or society at large. The adolescent, the peers, the family, and the society at large are part of an integrated holistic system whose components can work together with no tensions. The concepts of balance and equilibrium will enable the adolescent to navigate tensions experienced during rapid growth: the tension between high intellect capacity in the adolescent balanced by wisdom acquired through experience, the tension between the abstract / idealistic adolescent thinking and the cruel realities of practical life, and the tension between biological sexual maturity and constraint on sexual expression because of delay of marriage until full maturity.

Besides a cognitive approach based on a world-view, an approach based on strengthening / restoring iman is needed for adolescents. A strong iman gives the adolescent strength to face the challenges of life through the knowledge that his faith is a direct connection to a higher power that he can rely on. This strength can also help overcome cognitive and behavioral defects due to an immature brain because the inner strength of the ruh can overcome weaknesses of the physical body. This fits well with the Islamic understanding of the human duality consisting of the physical body and the ruh or nafs.

The purpose of protecting life, hifdh al nafs
The purpose of protection of life motivates many medical interventions in adolescents. Growth anomalies such as early puberty, delayed puberty, and congenital anomalies are treated to protect good health. Programs that prevent adolescent injury, violence, crime, and delinquency serve the purpose of the protecting the life of the adolescent and the community at large. These programs should in the first instance be directed against the underlying socio-demographic risk factors such as the attention deficit and hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), low school connectedness, low scholastic achievement, high peer delinquency, alcohol, risky sex behavior, hopelessness, parental divorce, and weak parental authority.

Patient autonomy is fundamental in protecting life because of all the persons involved with the illness including healthcare workers and family members, it is the patient who has the purest of intentions and therefore should be the ultimate decision maker. This raises the issue of the competence of adolescents in consenting to, assenting to, and refusing medical decisions. Since their brain and therefore cognitive functioning are still developing, they may not be relied on to make the best decisions on their care. Research showing brain immaturity will require review of international and national statutes about adolescent competence in medical decisions. Review will also be needed for other issues that involve assertion of adolescent rights, ahliyyat al wujuub, and adolescent responsibilities as well as accountability, ahliyyat al ada.

Protection of progeny, hifdh al nasl
Sexual and reproductive behavior falls under the purpose of protecting the progeny. Many adolescent problems relate to sexual behavior that is part of reproduction. Mass media and entertainment outlets give a lot of sexual messages that impact adolescent sexual behavior. This is embedded in the economic system because commercial advertisement cannot operate without exploiting the sex theme. The problem arises when sexually mature adolescents, bombarded by sexual messages from the media and entertainment industries, cannot find legitimate sexual expression through marriage because they are not ready to run a home. They end up engaging in risky sexual behavior that results in teenage pregnancy and sexually transmitted infection (STI). The Prophet taught youth to control their sexual urges by fasting, saum, if they are not able to marry[6].Additional approaches to preventing risky sexual behavior is sexual and reproductive health (SRH) education at school and other social outlets. SRH can be a double-edged sword: it can help adolescents learn to control themselves but can also act as a stimulant to sexual experience among those who knew nothing. The parental role in SRH education cannot be over-emphasized. They have to talk to teenagers about marriage, courtship, pre-marital sex, STI, etc. A dangerous approach of some SRH education programs is the promotion of the concept of safe sex by use of condoms. This reduces teenage pregnancy and STI but increases promiscuity that is eventually detrimental to society by undermining the family institution based on marriage.

Protection of the mind, hifdh al aql.
Adolescent addictive and self-destructive behaviors can be considered aberrations of the mind. The most significant adolescent health problem is addiction to nicotine, alcohol, and drugs with their mental and physical consequences. Adolescents are susceptible to addictions because of their cognitive immaturity, failure to control emotions and drives, and peer or media pressures.

The adolescent social environment affects behavior that will lead to addiction for example the socio-demographic factors for adolescent smoking are environmental including living in a household with one parent or no parent,[7] parental or best friend smoking[8], exposure to secondary smoking acting through nicotine addiction,[9],[10] watching movies with smoking scenes.[11]

The socio-demographic risk factors of alcohol addiction are: movies with alcohol themes[12], friends[13], and conflict with parents[14]. Alcohol, named by the Prophet as the mother of all evils, umm al kabair[15], leads to risky sexual behavior in adolescence[16] and adulthood.[17]Binge drinking is associated with structural[18] and functional[19] changes in the brain.Genes have been found to interact in multifactorial adolescent alcohol pathways with such factors as parenting rule setting,[20] peer influence,[21] the psychosocial environment,[22] stressful life events,[23] and family malfunction or mistreatment.[24]

The socio-demographic risk factors of substance abuse are similar to those of nicotine and alcohol addiction. Structural defects found on MRI investigation indicate that growing adolescent brains are susceptible to cannabis[25]. Both socio-demographic and biological risk factors of substance abuse can in my opinion be overcome by good parenting and a healthy social ambiance.Religiosity protects against substance abuse[26] but research has shown that incongruence between internal religiosity and external religious manifestations isa high risk for alcohol and drug use in Mexican adolescents.[27]Anecdotal evidences that I have collected over the years also seem to match this finding. Further research will be needed to confirm the result as well as find an explanation for it.

Suicide and para-suicide are found among adolescents. Risk factors of suicide mediated through shaming are: parental separation, parental unemployment and experiences of sexual abuse.[28]Socio-demographic risk factors for suicide: low self-esteem,[29] sleep problems,[30],[31]conformity to social perfectionism[32] as well as genetic and environmental factors[33]. In addition to these, suicide has a biological basis. Frontal brain activity is a predictor of depression.[34]MRI differences in brain activation were found in the brains of teenagers before and after treatment for depression.[35]A neurobiological basis for suicide was also suggested by low levels of the brain derived neurotropic factor, which affects serotonin neuronal development. This development is associated with suicide risk independent of psychiatric diagnoses.[36]

There is no unanimous agreement that behavioral problems may arise from the immature adolescent brain but there is suggestive evidence. Brain abnormalities were associated with conduct disorders[37]. MRI studies found differences in activation in the brains of youth exposed to media violence and those not exposed[38]. MRI image differences werealso found among adolescents with eating disorders[39]. Structural and functional brain defects were found in females with anorexia nervosa[40].

The way forward
I would suggest five approaches to contemporary youth problems. First: an intellectual/cognitive approach that will capitalize on the abstract thinking of adolescents to present an integrated Islamic world view to resolve identity and imbalance problems and to understand modern media and entertainment in their proper perspective. Second:Iman restoration therapy to provide the spiritual force needed to stand up to temptations. Third: Approach fiqh issues from the maqasid perspective that starts with the higher purposes and not the branches. Fourth:Early marriage with delayed parenthood to prevent evils of extra marital sexual relations and their consequences. Fifth:Social engineering to bring back life in the extended family. Sixth: Build adolescent self-esteem by positive parenting and hope in the future of the ummah.


REFERENCES



[1]  Qur’an 6:152, 12:22, 17:34, 18:82, 22:5, 40:67, 46:15)
[2]   Qur;an 40:67
[3]   Abu IshaqIbrahim bin Musa AlShatibi. Al Muwafaqaat fi usuul al shari’at.Dar Ibnaffan Al Khobar Saudi Arabia 1997.
[4]   Malik Badri.Contemplation: An Islamic Psychospiritual Study, IIIT Herndon USA, 2000,
[5]   AbdulHamidAbuSulayman. The Qur’anic Worldview: A Springboard for Cultural Reform, IIIT Herndon USA, 2011.
[6]  SahihBukhari Hadith No. 5066.
[15] Al Suyuuti. Al Jami’u al Saghiir. Hadith No. 414