Publication | Open Access
Overview and Summary: Twenty-five-year Followup of High-risk Children
72
Citations
48
References
1995
Year
Schizophrenia Spectrum DisordersPsychologyMatched ControlsChild ProtectionPreventive PediatricsPediatric EpidemiologyPsychiatric GeneticsChild Maltreatment PreventionEnvironmental FactorsPublic HealthNeurogeneticsHealth SciencesPsychiatryRisk PredictionEarly Childhood DevelopmentPsychotic DisorderChild DevelopmentChild HealthPediatricsGenetic RiskSchizophreniaChild Health PolicyBiological PsychiatryMedicineChild PsychiatryPsychopathologyHigh-risk Children
We report a 25-year followup of a group of 50 children at genetic risk for schizophrenia (by virtue of having a parent with the disorder) and 50 matched controls. The children who eventually developed schizophrenia spectrum disorders, including schizophrenia, were identifiable by cognitive-psychophysiological, neurointegrative, and social/personality traits in the preteenage period. The children at risk were also more likely to develop other Axis I disorders, chiefly affective. Moreover, the risk of Axis I disorders was significantly greater among children raised in the group atmosphere of a kibbutz than among those raised in their own nuclear families in cities and towns in Israel. The study is a unique contribution to knowledge of factors underlying the development of psychopathology.
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