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Journal Article

Citation

Lindsay WR, Carson D, Holland AJ, Taylor JL, O'Brien G, Wheeler JR. J. Appl. Res. Intellect. Disabil. 2013; 26(1): 71-80.

Affiliation

Castlebeck, Darlington, UK; Bangor University, Gwyneth, UK; Deakin University, Melbourne Victoria, Australia; University of Abertay, Dundee, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/jar.12011

PMID

23255380

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Developmental and index offence variables have been implicated strongly in later criminal behaviour and service pathways and this paper investigated attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) which, with conduct disorder, has emerged from previous studies on offenders. ADHD and conduct disorder are over-represented among criminal populations when compared to the general population. The present authors reviewed the extent to which ADHD affected the presentation of offenders with intellectual disability. METHOD: Information related to index behaviour, history of problem behaviours, childhood adversity and psychiatric diagnoses was recorded in 477 referrals to forensic intellectual disability services. Comparisons were made between those with a previous diagnosis of ADHD and those without. RESULTS: The ADHD group showed higher proportions of physical aggression, substance use, previous problems including aggression, sexual offences and property offences, birth problems and abuse in childhood. Effect sizes were small. CONCLUSION: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder with conduct disorder is associated with a greater degree and history of problematic behaviour in offenders with intellectual disability.


Language: en

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