Childhood aggression and the co-occurrence of behavioural and emotional problems : results across ages 3–16 years from multiple raters in six cohorts in the EU-ACTION project
Bartels, M., Hendriks, A., Mauri, M., Krapohl, E., Whipp, A., Bolhuis, K., Conde, L. C., Luningham, J., Ip, H. F., Hagenbeek, F., Roetman, P., Gatej, R., Lamers, A., Nivard, M., van Dongen, J., Lu, Y., Middeldorp, C., van Beijsterveldt, T., Vermeiren, R., . . . Boomsma, D. I. (2018). Childhood aggression and the co-occurrence of behavioural and emotional problems : results across ages 3–16 years from multiple raters in six cohorts in the EU-ACTION project. European Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 27(9), 1105-1121. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-018-1169-1
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European Child and Adolescent PsychiatryAuthors
Lu, Yi |
Date
2018Copyright
© The Authors 2018
Childhood aggression and its resulting consequences inflict a huge burden on affected children, their relatives, teachers,
peers and society as a whole. Aggression during childhood rarely occurs in isolation and is correlated with other symptoms
of childhood psychopathology. In this paper, we aim to describe and improve the understanding of the co-occurrence of
aggression with other forms of childhood psychopathology. We focus on the co-occurrence of aggression and other childhood
behavioural and emotional problems, including other externalising problems, attention problems and anxiety–depression.
The data were brought together within the EU-ACTION (Aggression in Children: unravelling gene-environment interplay
to inform Treatment and InterventiON strategies) project. We analysed the co-occurrence of aggression and other childhood
behavioural and emotional problems as a function of the child’s age (ages 3 through 16 years), gender, the person rating
the behaviour (father, mother or self) and assessment instrument. The data came from six large population-based European
cohort studies from the Netherlands (2x), the UK, Finland and Sweden (2x). Multiple assessment instruments, including the
Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL), the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) and Multidimensional Peer Nomination
Inventory (MPNI), were used. There was a good representation of boys and girls in each age category, with data for
30,523 3- to 4-year-olds (49.5% boys), 20,958 5- to 6-year-olds (49.6% boys), 18,291 7- to 8-year-olds (49.0% boys), 27,218
9- to 10-year-olds (49.4% boys), 18,543 12- to 13-year-olds (48.9% boys) and 10,088 15- to 16-year-olds (46.6% boys). We
replicated the well-established gender differences in average aggression scores at most ages for parental ratings. The gender
differences decreased with age and were not present for self-reports. Aggression co-occurred with the majority of other
behavioural and social problems, from both externalising and internalising domains. At each age, the co-occurrence was
particularly prevalent for aggression and oppositional and ADHD-related problems, with correlations of around 0.5 in general.
Aggression also showed substantial associations with anxiety–depression and other internalizing symptoms (correlations
around 0.4). Co-occurrence for self-reported problems was somewhat higher than for parental reports, but we found neither
rater differences, nor differences across assessment instruments in co-occurrence patterns. There were large similarities in
co-occurrence patterns across the different European countries. Finally, co-occurrence was generally stable across age and
sex, and if any change was observed, it indicated stronger correlations when children grew older. We present an online tool
to visualise these associations as a function of rater, gender, instrument and cohort. In addition, we present a description of
the full EU-ACTION projects, its first results and the future perspectives.
...
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Springer Berlin HeidelbergISSN Search the Publication Forum
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