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Journal ArticleDOI

Behavioral problems and competencies reported by parents of normal and disturbed children aged four through sixteen.

Thomas M. Achenbach, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1981 - 
- Vol. 46, Iss: 1, pp 1-82
TLDR
In this paper, the authors provide prevalence data on behavioral problems and competencies, identify differences related to demographic variables, and compare clinically referred and demographically similar non-referred children.
Abstract
The study was designed (a) to provide prevalence data on behavioral problems and competencies, (b) to identify differences related to demographic variables, and (c) to compare clinically referred and demographically similar nonreferred children. Data were obtained with the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL), consisting of 20 social competence items and 118 behavior problems. Parents of 1,300 referred children completed the CBCL at intake into outpatient mental health services, while parents of 1,300 randomly selected nonreferred children completed the CBCL in a home interview survey. Intraclass correlations were in the .90s for interparent agreement, 1-week test-retest reliability, and inter-interviewer reliability. Indices of the reported prevalence of each item are graphically portrayed for children grouped by age, gender, and clinical status. Multiple regressions and ANCOVAs showed minimal racial differences but significant tendencies for lower SES children to have higher behavior problem and lower competence scores than upper SES children. There were numerous gender differences on specific items but no significant gender difference in total behavior problem or competence score. Age showed more and larger differences than the other demographic variables, but these differences were dwarfed by differences related to referral status. Across all demographic groups, referal status accounted for more variance in total behavior problem and social competence scores than in the scores for any single item. However, some behavior problems that have traditionally received little attention were much more strongly associated with referral status than problems that have received much attention. Cutoff points on the distributions of total behavior problem and social competence scores yield good separation between referred and nonreferred samples.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence and Development of Psychiatric Disorders in Childhood and Adolescence

TL;DR: The risk of having at least 1 psychiatric disorder by age 16 years is much higher than point estimates would suggest and concurrent comorbidity and homotypic and heterotypic continuity are more marked in girls than in boys.
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Methodology for Genetic Studies of Twins and Families

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A Children's Global Assessment Scale (CGAS)

TL;DR: The findings indicate that the CGAS can be a useful measure of overall severity of disturbance and is recommended to both clinicians and researchers as a complement to syndrome-specific scales.
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Peer relations and later personal adjustment: Are low-accepted children at risk?

TL;DR: There is general support for the hypothesis that children with poor peer adjustment are at risk for later life difficulties, and support is clearest for the outcomes of dropping out and criminality.
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Economic Deprivation and Early Childhood Development

TL;DR: It is found that family income and poverty status are powerful correlates of the cognitive development and behavior of children, even after accounting for other differences--in particular family structure and maternal schooling--between low- and high-income families.
References
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Two Factor Index of Social Position

TL;DR: In this article, a typescript manuscript by author dated 1957 is described, including scale and scoring within document, 12 pages, and includes scale, scoring, and scoring of 12 pages.
Journal Article

Social Class and Mental Illness: A Community Study

TL;DR: The ten-year collaborative research directed by Hollingshead and Redlich has already produced some twenty-five papers; and the general drift of their work is very well known, but in "Social Class and Mental Illness" most of the major data are given for the first time in detail.