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Conduct problems co-occur with hyperactivity in children with language impairment: A longitudinal study from childhood to adolescence
Author(s) -
Pickles Andrew,
Durkin Kevin,
Mok Pearl LH,
Toseeb Umar,
Conti-Ramsden Gina
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
autism and developmental language impairments
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.117
H-Index - 2
ISSN - 2396-9415
DOI - 10.1177/2396941516645251
Subject(s) - psychology , conduct disorder , prosocial behavior , developmental psychology , attention deficit hyperactivity disorder , strengths and difficulties questionnaire , specific language impairment , early childhood , clinical psychology , psychiatry , mental health
Background Language impairment is a common developmental disorder which is frequently associated with externalising problems. In this study, we investigate for the first time, joint trajectories of conduct problems and hyperactivity in children with language impairment from childhood to adolescence. We determine patterns of co-occurrence of symptoms and identify specific risk and protective factors.Methods We develop a trajectory grouping method to examine simultaneously the conduct and hyperactivity problem scores of 164 children with language impairment at 7, 8, 11 and 16 years of age.Results We identified five groups of children with distinct trajectories of symptoms. Three trajectory groups all had different conduct/hyperactivity problems: a persistent problems group (15%), an adolescent-onset group (24%) and a childhood-limited group (17%). There were two trajectory groups that did not show conduct problems.Conclusions Conduct problems always co-occurred with hyperactivity in children with language impairment regardless of differences in the onset of symptoms (childhood versus adolescence) or their persistence (persistent versus childhood limited). Reading difficulties were strongly associated with mixed conduct/hyperactivity problems that started early (childhood) and continued into adolescence (the persistent trajectory group). Prosocial behaviours were found to be protective against conduct problems.

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