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Recent Undesirable Life Events and Psychiatric Disorder in Childhood and Adolescence
121
Citations
23
References
1985
Year
Adolescent Behavioral HealthEducationMental HealthTrauma In ChildAdolescenceChild Mental HealthPsychologyChild PsychologyPsychiatryDepressionAdolescent PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentPsychiatric DisorderChildren's Mental HealthChild DevelopmentRecent Life EventsPediatricsMood DisordersPermanent SeparationsMedicineLife Events ScheduleChild PsychiatryPsychopathology
A sample of children and adolescents (n = 157) attending a child psychiatry outpatient clinic with conduct or emotional disturbance were compared with community controls (n = 76) for the number and type of recent life events. A Life Events Schedule for children and adolescents was developed and used as a semi-structured interview. Four clinical groups were identified according to their predominant presenting symptoms (conduct, mild mood, severe mood, or somatic). An excess of events carrying a severe degree of negative impact was found for all four groups, compared with matched controls. Eleven classes of events were examined: there is a suggestion that two classes (martial/family, accident/illness) may be more important for conduct and mild mood disorders, and that a further class (permanent separations, termed exits) may be more important for somatic and severe mood disorders.
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