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      Children's attitudes towards ADHD, depression and learning disabilities : Children's Attitudes Towards ADHD, Depression and Learning Disabilities

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      Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs
      Wiley-Blackwell

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          Prejudice, Social Distance, and Familiarity with Mental Illness

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            Child and adolescent problems predict DSM-IV disorders in adulthood: a 14-year follow-up of a Dutch epidemiological sample.

            Few studies exist that examine continuities between child and adult psychopathology in unselected samples. This study prospectively examined the adult outcomes of psychopathology in an epidemiological sample of children and adolescents across a 14-year period. In 1983, parent ratings of behavioral and emotional problems were obtained for 1,578 children and adolescents aged 4 through 16 years from the Dutch general population. At follow-up, 14 years later, subjects were reassessed with a standardized DSM-IV interview. High levels of childhood problems predicted an approximate 2- to 6-fold increased risk for adulthood DSM-IV diagnoses. The associations between specific childhood problems and adulthood diagnoses were complex. Social Problems in girls predicted later DSM-IV disorder. Rule-breaking behavior in boys predicted both mood disorders and disruptive disorders in adulthood. High levels of childhood behavioral and emotional problems are related to DSM-IV diagnoses in adulthood. The strongest predictor of disorders in adulthood was childhood rule-breaking behavior. Attention Problems did not predict any of the DSM-IV categories when adjusted for the associations with other Child Behavior Checklist scales.
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              Popularity, friendship quantity, and friendship quality: interactive influences on children's loneliness and depression.

              A mediational model positing that the effects of popularity on children's loneliness and depression are passed through indexes of friendship experiences was tested using structural equation modeling. Children (193 3rd through 6th graders) completed a battery of sociometric and self-report questionnaires from which measures of popularity, multiple friendship dimensions (i.e., quantity and quality of best and good friendships), and loneliness and depression were derived. Confirmation of a slightly modified model supported the mediational hypothesis. Although popularity exerted no direct impact on the adjustment indexes, it strongly influenced friendship, which, in turn, affected depression through its strong association with loneliness. It appears that popularity is important for setting the stage for relationship development, but that it is dyadic friendship experiences that most directly influence feelings of loneliness and depression.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs
                Wiley-Blackwell
                14713802
                October 2013
                October 25 2013
                : 13
                : 4
                : 234-241
                Article
                10.1111/j.1471-3802.2012.01263.x
                70977e1f-2294-4587-b267-acca12c52175
                © 2013

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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