The role of mental health problems in explaining violent behaviors in children and adolescents over the lifecourse: An exploratory study
Juvenile violence is a phenomenon that consistently garners great attention in the media, the public, and across a multitude of academic disciplines. A growing body of literature in developmental and lifecourse criminology has called for innovative research to further investigate the causes and corr...
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ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-34602015-09-30T04:39:24Z The role of mental health problems in explaining violent behaviors in children and adolescents over the lifecourse: An exploratory study Boots, Denise Paquette Juvenile violence is a phenomenon that consistently garners great attention in the media, the public, and across a multitude of academic disciplines. A growing body of literature in developmental and lifecourse criminology has called for innovative research to further investigate the causes and correlates of serious juvenile offenders. Toward this end, the present study uses prospective, longitudinal data from the Pittsburgh Youth Study (PYS) to gauge the temporal impact of childhood and adolescent mental health problems on the development of serious offending behaviors in boys. Borrowing largely from the work of Achenbach and colleagues (2001), data from parent and teacher reports of psychopathological problems were used to create DSM-oriented scales for Oppositional Defiant, Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity, Anxiety, and Affective Problems. These scales offer a more continuous form of measurement than DSM diagnoses and allowed for distinctions between normal, borderline, and clinical levels of mental health problems. Forward-step logistic regression analyses indicated that three different teacher-reported DSM-oriented mental health problems emerged at three different stages of development as significant predictors of serious violence over the lifecourse. The significant substantive, methodological, and public policy implications of the study are discussed. 2006-06-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/2461 http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3460&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Dsm-oriented scales Childhood psychopathology Youth aggression Etiology of youth violence Juvenile violence American Studies Arts and Humanities |
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Dsm-oriented scales Childhood psychopathology Youth aggression Etiology of youth violence Juvenile violence American Studies Arts and Humanities |
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Dsm-oriented scales Childhood psychopathology Youth aggression Etiology of youth violence Juvenile violence American Studies Arts and Humanities Boots, Denise Paquette The role of mental health problems in explaining violent behaviors in children and adolescents over the lifecourse: An exploratory study |
description |
Juvenile violence is a phenomenon that consistently garners great attention in the media, the public, and across a multitude of academic disciplines. A growing body of literature in developmental and lifecourse criminology has called for innovative research to further investigate the causes and correlates of serious juvenile offenders. Toward this end, the present study uses prospective, longitudinal data from the Pittsburgh Youth Study (PYS) to gauge the temporal impact of childhood and adolescent mental health problems on the development of serious offending behaviors in boys. Borrowing largely from the work of Achenbach and colleagues (2001), data from parent and teacher reports of psychopathological problems were used to create DSM-oriented scales for Oppositional Defiant, Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity, Anxiety, and Affective Problems. These scales offer a more continuous form of measurement than DSM diagnoses and allowed for distinctions between normal, borderline, and clinical levels of mental health problems. Forward-step logistic regression analyses indicated that three different teacher-reported DSM-oriented mental health problems emerged at three different stages of development as significant predictors of serious violence over the lifecourse. The significant substantive, methodological, and public policy implications of the study are discussed. |
author |
Boots, Denise Paquette |
author_facet |
Boots, Denise Paquette |
author_sort |
Boots, Denise Paquette |
title |
The role of mental health problems in explaining violent behaviors in children and adolescents over the lifecourse: An exploratory study |
title_short |
The role of mental health problems in explaining violent behaviors in children and adolescents over the lifecourse: An exploratory study |
title_full |
The role of mental health problems in explaining violent behaviors in children and adolescents over the lifecourse: An exploratory study |
title_fullStr |
The role of mental health problems in explaining violent behaviors in children and adolescents over the lifecourse: An exploratory study |
title_full_unstemmed |
The role of mental health problems in explaining violent behaviors in children and adolescents over the lifecourse: An exploratory study |
title_sort |
role of mental health problems in explaining violent behaviors in children and adolescents over the lifecourse: an exploratory study |
publisher |
Scholar Commons |
publishDate |
2006 |
url |
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/2461 http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3460&context=etd |
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