Sentences with phrase «other internalizing symptoms»

Reduce children's posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, depression, other internalizing symptoms, and behavior problems
A useful direction for future research may be to extend our work to consider other internalizing symptom clusters.

Not exact matches

Furthermore, low income is strongly associated with poor parental mental and physical health.40, 42 Parental irritability and depressive symptoms have been associated with fewer interactions and more conflictual interactions with older children, leading to less satisfactory emotional, social, and cognitive development.43 Specifically, the parents» emotional state and parenting has been shown to greatly affect their children's social adjustment, self - esteem, social competence, and externalizing as well as internalizing behaviors.10, 13 As noted by the Institute of Medicine, there is an intergenerational transmission of depressive symptoms.17 Whether this relationship is due to poverty, home environment, family structure, family resources, social support, or other factors warrants further research.
However, Reijntjes and colleagues» review included only 2 studies that measured psychosomatic symptoms; unfortunately, these symptoms were not distinguished from other types of internalizing problems (eg, depression, anxiety, or loneliness), but a pooled correlation for each study was computed, with no comparison between bullied and nonbullied children.
Again, girls who did not recover had higher reports of other symptoms during adolescence, both more internalizing and externalizing behaviors, even though during adolescence they did not report more depressive symptoms than the girls who bounced back.
As a result, they tend to spend more time onlooking (watching other children without joining) and hovering on the edge of social groups.8, 11 There is some evidence to suggest that young depressive children also experience social impairment.12 For example, children who display greater depressive symptoms are more likely to be rejected by peers.10 Moreover, deficits in social skills (e.g., social participation, leadership) and peer victimization predict depressive symptoms in childhood.13, 14 There is also substantial longitudinal evidence linking social withdrawal in childhood with the later development of more significant internalizing problems.15, 16,17 For example, Katz and colleagues18 followed over 700 children from early childhood to young adulthood and described a pathway linking social withdrawal at age 5 years — to social difficulties with peers at age 15 years — to diagnoses of depression at age 20 years.
Respondents made quantitative ratings of the clinical significance of developmental trauma disorder, developmental trauma exposure, and symptom items and also posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other Axis I internalizing and externalizing disorder symptom items for 4 clinical vignettes.
First, we need to continue to raise awareness about the early emergence of anxiety and depression in young children, as symptoms of internalizing problems can often go unnoticed by others.
These problems include attention deficit disorder; externalizing problems such as aggression, anger, conduct disorder, cruelty to animals, destructiveness, oppositional behavior and noncompliance, and drug and alcohol use; internalizing problems such as anxiety, depression, excessive clinging, fears, shyness, low self - esteem, passivity and withdrawal, self - blame, sadness, and suicidal tendencies; symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder such as flashbacks, nightmares, anxiety and hypervigilance, sleep disturbances, numbing of affect, and guilt; separation anxiety; social behavior and competence problems such as poor problem - solving skills, low empathy, deficits in social skills, acceptance, and perpetration of violence in relationships; school problems such as poor academic performance, poor conduct, and truancy; somatic problems such as headaches, bedwetting, insomnia, and ulcers; and obsessive - compulsive disorder and other assorted temperamental difficulties.
Target Population: Adolescents 11 to 18 with the following symptoms or problems: substance abuse or at risk, delinquent / conduct disorder, school and other behavioral problems, and both internalizing and externalizing symptoms
For these children, parent training alone may be insufficient, and different or more intensive treatments may be necessary, including treatments to address internalizing as well as externalizing symptoms, or to address parental problems with stress, or other difficulties.
For the parent report, convergent and divergent validity were evaluated by calculating Pearson correlation coefficients between behavioral inhibition on the one hand, and symptoms of anxiety, internalizing and externalizing symptoms on the other hand.
Anxiety disorders are often more difficult to recognize than disruptive behavior disorders because the former's symptoms are internalized — that is, they often exist within the mind of the child rather than in such outward behavior as verbal outbursts or pushing others to be first in line.
In prior work we used a longitudinal design to test whether the interaction between internalizing and externalizing symptoms in early adolescence (11 — 12 years old) predicted adolescent alcohol and drug use (a composite of cigarette, marijuana, and other illicit SU) 2 years later (Scalco et al. 2014).
At 6 months follow - up there was a slight increase of father - reported internalizing symptoms and mother - reported externalizing symptoms in the children with other comorbidity, whereas children with one or more anxiety disorders and no non-anxiety comorbid disorders still showed a decline in internalizing symptoms.
Peer - victimization was shown to contribute to internalizing symptoms, such as anxiety, depression, and low - self - esteem [8], as well as to externalizing problems, such as aggression, disruptiveness, and other provocative behavior symptoms [9, 10, 11].
The BPI is a symptom checklist (Table 1), originally developed for use in the National Health Interview Survey with 28 items drawn largely from the Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist.21, 22 The items generate 2 subscales — one describing externalizing behaviors (BPI - EXT) and the other describing internalizing behaviors (BPI - INT).
When exploring whether additional therapy influenced effects over time, we found that families who received additional therapy reported more decrease in parental internalizing symptoms and in parental overreactivity at only one out of three measurement occasions, while no stronger benefits for these families were found on the other outcomes at any measurement occasion.
One possible explanation for mixed findings is that the association between internalizing symptoms and adolescent SU may depend on other moderating variables.
Consequently, future studies could benefit from taking other internalizing problems besides depressive symptoms, such as social anxiety, into account.
(b) How consistent is the evidence that specific forms of insecurity are more strongly related to internalizing symptoms, anxiety, and depression than are other forms of insecurity?
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