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Journal Article

Citation

Kashani JH, Jones MR, Borduin CM, Thomas LA, Reid JC. Child Psychiatry Hum. Dev. 2000; 30(3): 145-159.

Affiliation

Case Western Reserve University, Laurelwood Hospital, Willoughby, OH 44094, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2000, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

10851790

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study identified individual and peer-relations problems of inpatient youths who are aggressive, and whether youths who are aggressive in two settings have greater treatment needs than youths who are aggressive in one setting only. METHODS: 85 youths aged 10 to 16 years who were consecutively admitted to a psychiatric facility served as participants. Based on ratings by parents and hospital staff, youths were identified as aggressive in the community only, aggressive in the hospital only, aggressive in both settings, or nonaggressive. Dependent measures consisted of youth self-reports and ratings by parents and hospital staff. RESULTS: Youths who demonstrate aggressive behavior in two settings have more nonaggressive behavior problems, more disturbed peer relations, and more hostile thinking than do nonaggressive youths, and some youths, although they may behave aggressively during hospitalization, have similar treatment needs as nonaggressive youths. CONCLUSIONS: Mental health professionals who work with youths in psychiatric settings need to develop treatment plans that directly address the more severe externalizing problems, hostile thinking, and peer problems of aggressive youths over and above that of nonaggressive youths, and should be aware that youths who behave aggressively during hospitalization may not have problems more severe than those of nonaggressive youths.


Language: en

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