Results 261 to 270 of about 236,553 (310)
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Cognition in Child and Adolescent Behavior Disorders
1984Sattler (1974, p. 344), in his textbook on the assessment of children’s intelligence, states: “Research has shown that intellectual functioning is not usually a major factor of importance in the etiology of childhood behavioral or neurotic disorders.” He goes on to suggest, however, that emotional disorders could affect intellectual functioning in many
Anne E. Hogan, Herbert C. Quay
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Child and Adolescent Behaviorally Based Disorders
Research on Social Work Practice, 2012Objectives: The purpose of this study was to investigate the historical construction and empirical support of two child and adolescent behaviorally based mental health disorders: oppositional defiant and conduct disorders.
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International Journal of Health Services, 1974
This paper presents methods of approaching mental illness which represent alternatives to the medical model and the current diagnostic system. It also points to new ways of handling such complex independent variables as race and class to more clearly delineate the critical components of those constructs for observed relationships.
T S, Langner +2 more
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This paper presents methods of approaching mental illness which represent alternatives to the medical model and the current diagnostic system. It also points to new ways of handling such complex independent variables as race and class to more clearly delineate the critical components of those constructs for observed relationships.
T S, Langner +2 more
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Perioperative management of the child with behavioral disorders.
Middle East journal of anaesthesiology, 2012Behavioral disorders can be a normal part of development of a child, or secondary to extraordinary life stresses or associated with a child's inherent disorder. In those children, each hospital visit represents a major challenge for the child, his parents and the hospital staff.
Vanda Yazbek, Karam, Hanane, Barakat
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Prevalence and Genetic Architecture of Child Behavior Checklist–Juvenile Bipolar Disorder
Biological Psychiatry, 2005No consensus has been reached yet on how best to characterize children with juvenile bipolar disorder (JBD). Several groups have shown that children on the attention problems (AP), aggressive behavior (AGG), and anxious-depressed (AD) syndromes of the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) are likely to meet criteria for DSM-JBD.
Hudziak, James J. +4 more
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Journal of Affective Disorders, 2015
A Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) profile defined as Dysregulation Profile (DP) (scores 2 standard deviations or more in anxiety/depression, aggression, attention subscales) has been correlated to poor emotional and behavioral self-regulation. The clinical meaning and the prognostic implications of CBCL-DP are still debated, although it seems ...
Masi G, Pisano S, Milone A, Muratori P.
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A Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) profile defined as Dysregulation Profile (DP) (scores 2 standard deviations or more in anxiety/depression, aggression, attention subscales) has been correlated to poor emotional and behavioral self-regulation. The clinical meaning and the prognostic implications of CBCL-DP are still debated, although it seems ...
Masi G, Pisano S, Milone A, Muratori P.
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[Therapy of a child with neurotic development and behavior disorders].
Psychiatrie, Neurologie, und medizinische Psychologie, 1981The parents of children with defective neurotic development are as far as possible to be included in the treatment. The material for the work with the child must be mainly obtained as projective material with playing, individual or in groups, being of the greatest importance.
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Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 2001
Wendy K Silverman +2 more
exaly
Wendy K Silverman +2 more
exaly

