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Toddlers
Who Throw Temper Tantrums
May End Up in Prison Later in Life
Excerpt By Nicolle Charbonneau,
HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews)
-- Kids who have temper fits and show other bad behavior when
they're young may end up in prison cells when they're older, says
a new British study.
Toddlers who
disobey, throw frequent and severe temper tantrums and struggle
with wetting and soiling problems are likelier to have at least
one criminal conviction later in life, say the researchers.
And while
the researchers caution that most children who throw tantrums
will not go on to a criminal career, they suggest that intervention
programs at the pre-school level could prevent increasingly problematic
behavior for certain children.
The study,
led by psychology professor Jim Stevenson at the University of
Southampton in Southampton, U.K., is reported in the September
issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry.
In a previous
study, Stevenson and colleague Robert Goodman followed a small
group of pre-school children for five years. By the time the children
were in middle childhood, those who had had sleeping and eating
problems and temper tantrums were at a greater risk of continuing
difficulties in later childhood, the researchers say.
To find out
what happened farther down the road. Stevenson and Goodman interviewed
the parents of their initial group of 828 London 3-year-olds born
in 1969 and 1970, and collected information about childhood behavior
and development, family details and social status.
The researchers
focused on behavior problems such as soiling, day- and night-time
wetting, hyperactivity and disobedience.
Starting in
1993, when the children had reached ages 23 and 24, the researchers
traced any juvenile and adult criminal convictions.
They found
81 adults had convictions, including 26 for violent offenses.
And they found
that certain childhood behaviors were associated with later criminal
behavior. Children with a history of hyperactivity were 2.4 times
more likely to have an adult conviction, and habitually disobedient
children had a 2.7 higher risk.
Stevenson
found that certain behaviors seemed closely associated with a
later history of violent offenses. Tantrums were linked to a 3.61-fold
increased risk of an adult conviction for violence, while daytime
wetting was linked to a 6.37-fold increased risk.
Russell Searight,
director of behavioral medicine at the Forest Park Hospital Family
Practice Residency Program in St. Louis, Miss., says he was struck
by the association between the early behaviors and later criminal
behavior. "We do know that early-onset conduct problems seem
to be much more predictive of more severe behavior later on, but
I had never seen anything that looked at kids quite this young."
"The
theory is that these [temperaments] are probably constitutional
-- that children are born with them," says Searight. "It's
probably partly mediated by very subtle differences in the central
nervous system."
Beyond the
distress these behaviors cause children and their families, Stevenson
says there's a social cost of letting these problems develop and
continue as the child ages. He says evidence suggests that early
intervention can help.
In general,
he says parents shouldn't worry that a child who throws the odd
temper tantrum will grow up to be a criminal. "The majority
of those children will not have a criminal record later on,"
says Stevenson.
"What
we are differentiating here are not just the occasional temper
tantrums, but tantrums that occur on the order of three times
a week and of sufficient severity for the parents to be concerned,"
says Stevenson.
Searight
says, "These are kids who are not readily consoled. They're
irritable a good deal of the time, and they're particularly difficult
if their schedule is changed in any way. They're not terribly
adaptable."
Searight says
children with these temperaments need to be kept on a rigid schedule,
and parents need to be highly consistent. "Over time, there
does seem to be some improvement in behavior" under a tight
structure.
He says American
judges frequently refer young people with conduct problems to
the military, which is highly structured, although psychologists
generally don't agree with this approach.
What To
Do
The American
Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry publishes information
pamphlets on
soiling,
bedwetting and
hyperactivity.
KidsHealth provides information on temper tantrums.
If you're
ready to try the extreme solution, here are the Web sites for
Marine,
Army,
Navy and Air Force
recruiters.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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