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Journal Article

Citation

Mordre M, Groholt B, Kjelsberg E, Sandstad B, Myhre AM. BMC Psychiatry 2011; 11(1): 57.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/1471-244X-11-57

PMID

21481227

PMCID

PMC3082292

Abstract

Background Few longitudinal studies have explored lifetime criminality in adults with a childhood history of severe mental disorders. In the present study, we wanted to explore the association between adult delinquency and several different childhood diagnoses in an in-patient population. Of special interest was the impact of disturbance of activity and attention (ADHD) and mixed disorder of conduct and emotions on later delinquency, as these disorders have been variously associated with delinquent development. Methods Former Norwegian child psychiatric in-patients (n=541) were followed up 19-41 years after hospitalization by record linkage to the National Register of Criminality. On the basis of the hospital records, the patients were re-diagnosed according to ICD-10. The association between diagnoses and other baseline factors and later delinquency were investigated using univariate and multivariate Cox regression analyses. Results At follow-up, 24% of the participants had been convicted of criminal activity. In the multivariate Cox regression analysis,conduct disorder (RR=2.0, 95%CI= 1.2-3.4) and hyperkinetic conduct disorder (RR=2.7, 95% CI=1.6-4.4) significantly increased the risk of future criminal behaviour. Pervasive developmental disorder (RR=0.4, 95%CI=0.2-0.9) and mental retardation (RR= 0.4, 95%CI= 0.3-0.8) reduced the risk for a criminal act. Male gender (RR=3.6, 95%CI=2.1-6.1) and chronic family difficulties (RR= 1.3, 95% CI= 1.1-1.5) both predicted future criminality. Conclusions Conduct disorder in childhood was highly associated with later delinquency both alone or in combination with hyperactivity, but less associated when combined with an emotional disorder. ADHD in childhood was no more associated with later delinquency than the rest of the disorders in the study population. Our finding strengthens the assumption that there is no direct association between ADHD and criminality.


Language: en

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