![]() |
![]() |
|
|
|
|
|||
|
|
|
Medicineworld.org: Behavioral difficulties at school
Subscribe To Society News RSS Feed
Behavioral difficulties at school
Adolescents who misbehave at school are more likely to have difficulties throughout their adult lives, finds a 40-year study of British citizens published on bmj.com today. These difficulties cover all areas of life, from mental health to domestic and personal relationships to economic deprivation.
Ian Colman, an Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research Population Health Investigator, and Assistant Professor at the University of Alberta's School of Public Health, and colleagues examined the health and social problems of adults who had mild and severe behavioural problems as adolescents. The findings are based on more than 3,500 individuals taking part in the Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development (the British 1946 birth cohort), over a 40-year period. All the participants were aged between 13 and 15 at the start of the study. Approximately a quarter of the participants had mild behavioural problems. Participants were rated by their teachers as having severe, mild or no conduct problems and were followed up between the ages of 36 and 53 when they were asked about their mental health, and social and economic status. The results reveal disturbing new information about the societal impact of milder behavioural problems. They show that the participants with severe or mild conduct problems in adolescence were more likely to leave school with no qualifications and go on to suffer many problems in adulthood including depression and anxiety, divorce, teenage pregnancy, and financial problems that continued throughout adult life. These results held true even after taking into account predictors of outcomes in adulthood such as sex, father's social class, adolescent depression and anxiety and cognitive ability. Interestingly, unlike prior studies in the field, these findings show that most of the participants who were badly behaved at school did not have alcohol problems as they got older. Colman and his team conclude: "Given the long-term costs to society, and the distressing impact on the adolescents themselves, our results might have considerable implications for public health policy." Posted by: Janet Source
Did you know?
Adolescents who misbehave at school are more likely to have difficulties throughout their adult lives, finds a 40-year study of British citizens published on bmj.com today. These difficulties cover all areas of life, from mental health to domestic and personal relationships to economic deprivation.
Medicineworld.org: Behavioral difficulties at school
Copyright statement The contents of this web page are protected. Legal action may follow for reproduction of materials without permission. |