Who is at greatest risk of adverse long-term outcomes?: The Finnish from a boy to a man study

被引:123
作者
Sourander, Andre [1 ]
Jensen, Peter
Davies, Mark
Niemelae, Solja
Elonheimo, Henrik
Ristkari, Terja
Helenius, Hans
Sillanmaeki, Lauri
Piha, Jorma
Kumpulainen, Kirsti
Tamminen, Tuula
Moilanen, Irma
Almqvist, Fredrik
机构
[1] Turku Univ Hosp, Dept Child Psychiat, FIN-20520 Turku, Finland
[2] Helsinki Univ Hosp, Dept Child Psychiat, Helsinki, Finland
[3] Univ Oulu, Dept Child Psychiat, Oulu, Finland
关键词
epidemiology; childhood; follow-up; predictor;
D O I
10.1097/chi.0b013e31809861e9
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Objective: To study associations between comorbid psychopathology and long-term outcomes in a large birth cohort sample from age 8 to early adulthood. Method: The sample included long-term outcome data on 2,556 Finnish boys born in 1981. The aim was to study the impact of early childhood psychopathology types (externalizing versus internalizing versus both) and informant sources (self-report versus parent/teacher reports) on young adult outcomes, based on data from a military registry of psychiatric diagnosis, a police registry on criminal and drug offenses, and self-reported problems in late adolescence and early adulthood. Results: Children with combined conduct and internalizing problems at age 8 had the worst outcomes and highest risk of subsequent psychiatric disorders, criminal offenses, and self-reported problems at follow-up, with 62% of these boys manifesting psychiatric disorders, committing criminal offenses, or both at follow-up. Although these children included only 4% of the sample, they were responsible for 26% of all criminal offenses at follow-up. In contrast, children with conduct problems without internalizing problems and those with attention problems had much less severe but nonetheless elevated levels of risk of antisocial personality disorder and criminal offenses. Long-term outcomes for these two groups were substantially better than for children with combined conduct and internalizing problems. Children with "pure" emotional problems had an elevated risk only of similar emotional problems at follow-up. Conclusions: The subjective suffering and long-term burden to society is especially high among children with comorbid conduct and internalizing problems in childhood. A major challenge for child and adolescent psychiatric, education, and social services is to develop effective intervention strategies focusing on these children. Additional longitudinal epidemiological studies of this comorbidity group are needed, and, if replicated, such findings will have important implications for future diagnostic classification systems (DSM-V).
引用
收藏
页码:1148 / 1161
页数:14
相关论文
共 65 条
[1]  
Achenbach T. M., 1991, Integrative guide for the 1991 CBCL/4-18, YSR, and the TRF profiles
[2]   6-YEAR PREDICTORS OF PROBLEMS IN A NATIONAL SAMPLE .3. TRANSITIONS TO YOUNG-ADULT SYNDROMES [J].
ACHENBACH, TM ;
HOWELL, CT ;
MCCONAUGHY, SH ;
STANGER, C .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 1995, 34 (05) :658-669
[3]   CHILD ADOLESCENT BEHAVIORAL AND EMOTIONAL-PROBLEMS - IMPLICATIONS OF CROSS-INFORMANT CORRELATIONS FOR SITUATIONAL SPECIFICITY [J].
ACHENBACH, TM ;
MCCONAUGHY, SH ;
HOWELL, CT .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1987, 101 (02) :213-232
[4]  
Almqvist F, 1999, EUR CHILD ADOLES PSY, V8, P3
[5]  
Angold A, 1999, J CHILD PSYCHOL PSYC, V40, P57, DOI 10.1111/1469-7610.00424
[6]  
[Anonymous], 1985, PSYCHOPHARMACOL BULL
[7]   THE ADOLESCENT OUTCOME OF HYPERACTIVE-CHILDREN DIAGNOSED BY RESEARCH CRITERIA .1. AN 8-YEAR PROSPECTIVE FOLLOW-UP-STUDY [J].
BARKLEY, RA ;
FISCHER, M ;
EDELBROCK, CS ;
SMALLISH, L .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 1990, 29 (04) :546-557
[8]   Predicting conduct problems: Can high-risk children be identified in kindergarten and grade 1? [J].
Bennett, KJ ;
Lipman, EL ;
Brown, S ;
Racine, Y ;
Boyle, MH ;
Offord, DR .
JOURNAL OF CONSULTING AND CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1999, 67 (04) :470-480
[9]   Screening for conduct problems: Does the predictive accuracy of conduct disorder symptoms improve with age? [J].
Bennett, KJ ;
Offord, DR .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2001, 40 (12) :1418-1425
[10]  
Biederman J, 1996, ARCH GEN PSYCHIAT, V53, P437