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Journal Article

Citation

Charach A, Bélanger SA, McLennan JD, Nixon MK. Paediatr. Child Health (1996) 2017; 22(8): 478-493.

Affiliation

Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Ottawa, Ontario.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Canadian Paediatric Society, Publisher Pulsus Group)

DOI

10.1093/pch/pxx128

PMID

29601056

PMCID

PMC5804901

Abstract

Disruptive behaviour problems in preschool children are significant risk factors for, and potential components of, neurodevelopmental and mental health disorders. Some noncompliance, temper tantrums and aggression between 2 and 5 years of age are normal and transient. However, problematic levels of disruptive behaviour, specifically when accompanied by functional impairment and/or significant distress, should be identified because early intervention can improve outcome trajectories. This position statement provides an approach to early identification using clinical screening at periodic health examinations, followed by a systematic mental health examination that includes standardized measures. The practitioner should consider a range of environmental, developmental, family and parent-child relationship factors to evaluate the clinical significance of disruptive behaviours. Options within a management plan include regular monitoring, accompanied by health guidance and parenting advice, referral to parent behaviour training as a core evidence-based intervention, and referral to specialty care for preschool children with significant disruptive behaviours, developmental or mental health comorbidities, or who are not responding to first-line interventions.


Language: fr

Keywords

ADHD; Behaviour problems; ODD; Preschoolers; Primary care; Screening

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