If your child has been diagnosed with Oppositional Defiant Disorder, or you strongly suspect it, the next question is
what to actually do differently. The encouraging news: ODD has well-researched treatment approaches, and they tend
to work — but they often look different from what intuition or generic parenting advice suggests, which is part of why
so many families feel stuck before getting the right kind of support.
Parent Management Training: The Foundation
For most children with ODD, the single most effective intervention isn’t therapy with the child alone — it’s structured
parent training. This might seem counterintuitive, but the evidence is consistent: teaching parents specific, research
based strategies for responding to oppositional behavior produces better outcomes than working with the child in
isolation.
Effective parent management training typically covers:
Reducing power struggles. Many interactions with an oppositional child accidentally turn into a battle for control.
Specific strategies help parents give effective instructions, pick fewer but more important battles, and avoid escalating
exchanges that reinforce the defiance cycle.
Strategic attention and praise. Consistently and specifically praising desired behavior, even small instances of
cooperation, helps shift the pattern over time — many parents are unintentionally giving the most attention to the
negative behavior, since that’s what demands a response in the moment.
Consistent, predictable consequences. Consequences that are planned in advance, applied calmly, and consistent
across situations tend to work far better than reactive, emotionally-charged responses in the heat of the moment, which
can inadvertently escalate conflict.
Effective communication strategies. How a request is phrased — calm, direct, and specific rather than vague or
delivered as a question — significantly affects whether a child with ODD complies or escalates.
This isn’t about parents doing something wrong that needs fixing. ODD-specific strategies are different from general
parenting approaches precisely because oppositional kids respond differently to typical methods — what works for most
children can actually reinforce the cycle in a child with ODD.
Therapy Approaches With Evidence
Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT) is specifically designed for younger children and involves real-time
coaching of parents during interactions with their child, building both connection and effective behavior management
skills simultaneously.
Collaborative Problem Solving focuses on identifying the specific skills a child is lacking (such as flexibility or
frustration tolerance) and working collaboratively, rather than through punishment alone, to build those skills.
Individual therapy for the child can help, particularly for older children and teens, focusing on emotional regulation,
problem-solving skills, and addressing any co-occurring anxiety, depression, or trauma that may be contributing to the
behavior.
Addressing What’s Underneath
Because ODD so frequently overlaps with ADHD, anxiety, learning differences, or other conditions, treatment often
needs to address more than the oppositional behavior itself. If undiagnosed ADHD is driving chronic frustration,
treating the ADHD often reduces the oppositional behavior significantly, sometimes more than behavior-focused
interventions alone. This is why a comprehensive evaluation upfront matters so much for building an effective plan.
Is Medication Ever Part of Treatment?
There’s no medication specifically approved to treat ODD itself. However, medication may be appropriate when there’s
a co-occurring condition — most commonly ADHD — that’s contributing significantly to the oppositional behavior. In
these cases, treating the underlying condition is often a meaningful part of an overall plan that also includes parent
training and behavioral strategies.
What Progress Actually Looks Like
Improvement with ODD treatment tends to be gradual, not immediate. Encouraging signs include fewer and shorter
outbursts, faster recovery after conflict, more instances of cooperation (even if inconsistent at first), and a reduction in
the intensity of power struggles, even if some friction remains. Consistency from caregivers over weeks and months —
not a single perfect intervention — is what drives lasting change.
A Note for Exhausted Parents
If you’ve been white-knuckling through daily battles with your child, please know that this is genuinely hard, and
seeking help is not a last resort for failed parents — it’s a proactive step that gives both you and your child better tools.
With the right support, the relationship between you and your child can genuinely improve, not just become more
tolerable.
Acen Integrative Psychiatric Services provides evaluation and treatment for ODD and related behavioral concerns,
including coordination with parent training and behavioral therapy, for children and adolescents across California,
Oregon, and Illinois via telehealth, with in-person visits available by request.
Ready for a different approach? Book an appointment or contact us — we’re glad to help you build a plan that
actually fits your family.
This article is for educational purposes and is not a substitute for a clinical evaluation. If you have concerns about your child’s behavior or development, please consult a licensed provider
