Frontiers | Heterogeneity Within Youth With Childhood-Onset Conduct Disorder in the ABCD Study frontiersin.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from frontiersin.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
21 as well as lower empathy than shown by the victims.
22 Often adolescents who inflict violence on others do so because they themselves are suffering or have suffered from abuse or early abandonment, or whose behavior is derived from living in a conflictive setting within the family, or where peers negatively influence their behavior.
Youths who develop in a violent setting show more stable aggressive traits and belief in the use of aggression. This, along with patterns of upbringing marked by rejection, severity or overprotection can cause moral disconnection from their acts and lead them to stronger justification of the use of violence, or to attribute the reason for such behavior to factors outside themselves.
Intensive childhood intervention program could help reduce deaths of despair
Mortality rates among young adults are rising in the U.S. due in part to deaths of despair preventable deaths from suicide, drug overdoses and alcohol-related liver disease. An intensive childhood intervention program called Fast Track could help reduce these deaths by reducing risky behaviors in adolescence and young adulthood, finds new research from Duke University and the Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group. To reduce deaths of despair, we must prevent the hopelessness and destructive behaviors that often lead to these deaths, says study co-author Kenneth A. Dodge, the William McDougall Distinguished Professor of Public Policy Studies at Duke s Sanford School of Public Policy. Dodge is a member of the Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group that created the Fast Track program.
E-Mail
DURHAM, N.C. Mortality rates among young adults are rising in the U.S. due in part to deaths of despair preventable deaths from suicide, drug overdoses and alcohol-related liver disease. An intensive childhood intervention program called Fast Track could help reduce these deaths by reducing risky behaviors in adolescence and young adulthood, finds new research from Duke University and the Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group. To reduce deaths of despair, we must prevent the hopelessness and destructive behaviors that often lead to these deaths, says study co-author Kenneth A. Dodge, the William McDougall Distinguished Professor of Public Policy Studies at Duke s Sanford School of Public Policy. Dodge is a member of the Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group that created the Fast Track program.