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Journal ArticleDOI

Adult outcomes of childhood and adolescent depression: II. Links with antisocial disorders.

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TLDR
There was a strong trend for depressives with CD to have a lower risk of depression in adulthood than depressed children without conduct problems, and there was a worse short-term outcome and a higher risk of adult criminality than depressed Children without Conduct Disorder.
Abstract
Sixty-three child and adolescent patients meeting operational criteria for depression and 68 non-depressed child psychiatric controls were followed into adulthood. Twenty-one percent of the depressed group had had conduct disorder (CD) in conjunction with their index depression. Depressed children with comorbid CD did not differ from depressed children without conduct problems with respect to depressive symptom presentation or demographic characteristics. However, depressives with CD had a worse short-term outcome and a higher risk of adult criminality than depressed children without conduct problems. There was a strong trend for depressives with CD to have a lower risk of depression in adulthood than depressed children without conduct problems. The outcomes of depressives with CD were very similar to those of nondepressed children with CD. The findings are discussed in the context of current classification schemes.

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Childhood and adolescent depression: a review of the past 10 years. Part I.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors qualitatively review the literature of the past decade covering the epidemiology, clinical characteristics, natural course, biology, and other correlates of early-onset major depressive disorder (MDD) and dysthymic disorder (DD).
Journal ArticleDOI

Mood disorders in children and adolescents: an epidemiologic perspective.

TL;DR: Developmental studies that include assessments of both hormonal changes and social changes through the pubertal transition are needed to investigate joint biological and environmental influences on the emergence of the gender difference in depression in puberty.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comorbidity in child psychopathology: concepts, issues and research strategies.

TL;DR: The importance of comorbidity is shown and it is noted that it is not dealt with optimally in either DSM-III-R or ICD-9.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identifying and developing empirically supported child and adolescent treatments

TL;DR: Child and adolescent therapy outcome research findings attest to the efficacy of a variety of treatments, but continued research progress will depend on greater attention to magnitude and maintenance of therapeutic change, long-term follow-up, moderators and mediators of change, and development and testing of treatment in conditions relevant to clinical practice.
Journal ArticleDOI

Depressive comorbidity in children and adolescents: empirical, theoretical, and methodological issues.

TL;DR: There was a high rate of comorbidity in children and adolescents with major depressive disorders or dysthymia, and the rates of other disorders in depressed children were higher than the rate of depression in those with depression.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Research diagnostic criteria: Rationale and reliability.

TL;DR: The development and initial reliability studies of a set of specific diagnostic criteria for a selected group of functional psychiatric disorders, the Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC), indicate high reliability for diagnostic judgments made using these criteria.
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DSM-III disorders in preadolescent children. Prevalence in a large sample from the general population.

TL;DR: The most prevalent disorders were attention deficit, oppositional, and separation anxiety disorders, and the least prevalent were depression and social phobia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adult outcomes of childhood and adolescent depression. I. Psychiatric status

TL;DR: There is substantial specificity in the continuity of affective disturbances between childhood and adult life, and the depressed group was at an increased risk for affective disorder in adult life and had elevated risks of psychiatric hospitalization and psychiatric treatment.
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