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Department/Unit:Child and Adolescent Psychiatry

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Kids and money: from piggy banks to credit cards

Gurian A
ORIGINAL:0009429
ISSN: n/a
CID: 1450142

State implementation of evidence-based practice for youths, Part I: Responses to the state of the evidence

Bruns, Eric J; Hoagwood, Kimberly Eaton
PMID: 18356704
ISSN: 0890-8567
CID: 167916

Construct validation of the social competence scale in preschool-age children

Gouley, KK; Brotman, LM; Huang, KY; Shrout, PE
This study evaluated the utility of the social competence scale (SCS)-parent version, a measure of social competence developed for children of elementary school age, for use with preschool-age children. Data were derived from two samples of preschoolers: a community sample assessed at enrollment to pre-kindergarten programs and a high-risk sample of children at familial risk for conduct problems participating in a preventive intervention trial. Using data from both samples, we assessed the factor structure, internal consistency, and stability of the SCS, and whether the SCS discriminated the high-risk sample from the community sample. Results support the utility and construct validity of the SCS for use in preschoolers. The total SCS scale was relatively stable over 24 months during the preschool period and was correlated with other measures of social competence, parent ratings of emotion regulation, lability and behavior problems, and tests of child cognitive ability
ISI:000255062100009
ISSN: 0961-205x
CID: 78380

Processing of differentially valued rewards and punishments in youths with bipolar disorder or severe mood dysregulation

Rau, Geoff; Blair, Karina S; Berghorst, Lisa; Knopf, Lisa; Skup, Martha; Luckenbaugh, David A; Pine, Daniel S; Blair, Robert J; Leibenluft, Ellen
BACKGROUND: Youths with chronic irritability and hyperarousal (i.e., severe mood dysregulation, SMD) have reward- and punishment-processing deficits distinct from those exhibited by children with episodic symptoms of mania (i.e., narrow-phenotype bipolar disorder, BD). Additionally, youths with SMD, like those with psychopathy, have prominent reactive aggression. Therefore, we hypothesized that SMD, but not BD, youths would be impaired on a decision-making task that has identified reward- and punishment-processing deficits in individuals with psychopathy. METHODS: A decision-making task was used in which BD (n = 23), SMD (n = 37), and control subjects (n = 31) were asked to choose between two images associated with different levels of reward or punishment. RESULTS: No between-group differences in task performance were found. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that BD, SMD, and normal youths do not differ in their ability to select between rewards and punishments of different value. Effect-size analyses suggest that this finding is not secondary to a type II error. Unlike individuals with psychopathy, neither SMD subjects nor those with BD differ from controls in their ability to select between differentially valued rewards and punishments.
PMCID:2683389
PMID: 18439115
ISSN: 1044-5463
CID: 161908

Obesity and diabetes in New York City, 2002 and 2004

Van Wye, Gretchen; Kerker, Bonnie D; Matte, Thomas; Chamany, Shadi; Eisenhower, Donna; Frieden, Thomas R; Thorpe, Lorna
INTRODUCTION: Obesity and diabetes have increased rapidly nationwide, yet reliable information on these disease trends in local urban settings is unavailable. We undertook this study to characterize trends in obesity and diagnosed diabetes from 2002 to 2004 among white, black, and Hispanic adult residents of New York City. METHODS: We used data from the Community Health Survey, an annual random-digit-dial telephone survey of approximately 10,000 New York City adults aged 18 years or older, and from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System, a similar nationwide survey. Main outcome measures were body mass index (BMI), calculated from self-reported height and weight, and self-reported diabetes. RESULTS: In 2 years, the prevalence of obesity increased 17% in New York City, from 19.5% in 2002 to 22.8% in 2004 (P < .0001). The prevalence of diagnosed diabetes also increased 17%, from 8.1% in 2002 to 9.5% in 2004 (P < .01). Nationally, the prevalence of obesity increased by 6% during this same time period (P < .05), and diabetes prevalence did not increase significantly. The median BMI among white adults in New York City was 25.1 kg/m(2), significantly lower than among Hispanics (26.4 kg/m(2)) and blacks (26.6 kg/m(2), P < .05). The prevalence of diabetes increased across all BMI categories. DISCUSSION: The rapid increase in obesity and diabetes in New York City suggests the severity of these twin epidemics and the importance of collecting and analyzing local data for local programming and policy making.
PMCID:2396976
PMID: 18341783
ISSN: 1545-1151
CID: 279122

ON MY MIND [General Interest Article]

LeDoux, Joseph E
PROQUEST:1466029371
ISSN: 1499-0679
CID: 91349

Effects of classroom organization on letter-word reading in first grade

Cameron, Claire E; Connor, Carol McDonald; Morrison, Frederick J; Jewkes, Abigail M
Teacher organization is a crucial part of classroom functioning; however, its relation to student achievement has not been investigated as extensively as that of instruction. In this study, organization is defined as the amount of time teachers spend explaining the purpose and procedures of learning activities and daily routines. Data from first-grade classrooms (N=44) observed three times during the school year (fall, winter, and spring) are analyzed, along with students' (N=108) literacy skills at fall and spring. Hierarchical Linear Modeling reveals that, controlling for students' fall word reading and vocabulary skills, as well as amount of language arts instruction they receive, both amount and change in amount over time in classroom organization significantly predicts spring word reading skills. Specifically, children in classrooms observed in higher amounts of classroom time in organization at the beginning of the school year, followed by sharp decreases over the school year, demonstrated stronger letter and word reading skills by spring, and this was a main effect (p<.05). Practical and research implications are discussed
PMID: 19083356
ISSN: 1873-3506
CID: 143255

Prevention of public health risks linked to bullying: a need for a whole community approach

Srabstein, Jorge; Joshi, Paramjit; Due, Pernille; Wright, Joseph; Leventhal, Bennett; Merrick, Joav; Kim, Young-Shin; Silber, Tomas; Kumpulainen, Kirsti; Menvielle, Edgardo; Riibner, Karen
Bullying is a very toxic psychosocial stressor associated with serious health problems and death, affecting both the victims and the bullies. This form of abuse or maltreatment occurs around the world and along the lifespan. Health professionals have the unique responsibility of promoting the development of community initiatives for the prevention of bullying and related health problems. This effort must include ongoing programs with elements of primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention. These programs should be supported and monitored by a public health policy with a strategy aimed at developing a whole community awareness about bullying and the related health risks, prohibiting bullying, and developing emotionally and physically safe environments in schools and workplace settings. Public health policy should mandate the monitoring, detection, and reporting of bullying incidents; provide guidance for school intervention; and offer guidelines for medical consultation
PMID: 18714555
ISSN: 0334-0139
CID: 104060

Family-Based Association Testing of OCD-associated SNPs of SLC1A1 in an autism sample

Brune, Camille W; Kim, Soo-Jeong; Hanna, Gregory L; Courchesne, Eric; Lord, Catherine; Leventhal, Bennett L; Cook, Edwin H
Reports identified the neuronal glutamate transporter gene, SLC1A1 (OMIM 133550, chromosome 9p24), as a positional and functional candidate gene for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). The presence of obsessions and compulsions similar to OCD in autism, the identification of this region in a genome-wide linkage analysis of individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), and the hypothesized role of glutamate in ASDs make SLC1A1 a candidate gene for ASD as well. To test for association between SLC1A1 and autism, we typed three single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs, rs301430, rs301979, rs301434) previously associated with OCD in 86 strictly defined trios with autism. Family-Based Association Tests (FBAT) with additive and recessive models were used to check for association. Additionally, an rs301430-rs301979 haplotype identified for OCD was investigated. FBAT revealed nominally significant association between autism and one SNP under a recessive model. The G allele of rs301979 was undertransmitted (equivalent to overtransmission of the C allele under a dominant model) to individuals with autism (Z=-2.47, P=0.01). The G allele was also undertransmitted in the T-G haplotype under the recessive model (Z=-2.41, P=0.02). Both findings were also observed in the male-only sample. However, they did not withstand correction for multiple comparisons
PMCID:2688703
PMID: 19360657
ISSN: 1939-3806
CID: 104084

Reliability of the ADI-R: multiple examiners evaluate a single case

Cicchetti, Domenic V; Lord, Catherine; Koenig, Kathy; Klin, Ami; Volkmar, Fred R
The authors assessed the reliability of the Autism Diagnostic Interview (ADI-R). Seven Clinical Examiners evaluated a three and one half year old female toddler suspected of being on the Autism Spectrum. Examiners showed agreement levels of 94-96% across all items, with weighted kappa (K(w)) between .80 and .88. They were in 100% agreement on 74% of the items; in excellent agreement on 6% of the items (93-96%, with K(w) between .78 and .85); in good agreement on 7% (89-90%, with K(w) between .62 and 0.68); and in fair agreement on 3% (82 - 84%, with K(w) between .40 and .47). For the remaining 10% of ADI-R items, examiners showed poor agreement (50-81% with K(w )between -.67 and .37)
PMID: 18058216
ISSN: 0162-3257
CID: 143025