Filter

  • Advanced Filters:

  • to
  • Specific Data Sources:

    All Edit

    Select All  |  Select None

Reset filters

DeepDyve - Search, Rent, Read
The easiest way for you to get scholarly articles:

  • Millions of articles from over 6,000 authoritative journals.
  • Get any 40 rentable articles for just $40 a month.
  • Read rented articles for an entire year.
  • Unused rentals get rolled over.

Bookmark

Experts' Recommendations for Treating Maladaptive Aggression in Youth

Preview Only

Experts' Recommendations for Treating Maladaptive Aggression in Youth

Abstract

Background: Psychiatric treatment for children and adolescents with clinically significant aggression is common and often involves the use of antipsychotic medications. Increasingly, pediatricians are initiating or managing such treatments despite limited evidence on optimal diagnostic, psychosocial, and medication approaches for pediatric aggression. Aims: The objective of this study was to gather clinicians' and researchers' expertise concerning the treatment of maladaptive aggression, using expert consensus survey methods to aid the development of guidelines for pediatricians and psychiatrists on the outpatient treatment of maladaptive aggression in youth (T-MAY). Methods: Forty-six experts (psychiatrists, pediatricians, and researchers) with >10 years of clinical and/or research experience in the treatment of pediatric aggression completed a 27-item survey (>400 treatment alternatives) about optimal diagnostic, psychosocial, and medication treatments. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and confidence intervals. Results: Expert consensus methodology clearly differentiated optimal versus nonoptimal treatment strategies for maladaptive aggression. In contrast to current practice trends, results indicated that experts support the use of psychosocial interventions and parent education and training before the use of medication for maladaptive aggression at every stage of medication treatment, from diagnosis to maintenance to medication discontinuation. Conclusion: Overall findings indicate that evidence-informed strategies for outpatient treatment of pediatric maladaptive aggression, guided by systematically derived expert opinions, are attainable. In light of the gap between the research literature and clinical practice, expert consensus opinion supports specific practices for optimal outpatient management in children and adolescents with severe and persistent behavioral difficulties.
Loading next page...
1 Page

Preview Only. This article cannot be rented because we do not currently have permission from the publisher.

 
/lp/mary-ann-liebert/experts-recommendations-for-treating-maladaptive-aggression-in-youth-H9YiKJiOwq
Title
Experts' Recommendations for Treating Maladaptive Aggression in Youth
Author(s)
Pappadopulos, Elizabeth; Rosato, Nancy Scotto; Correll, Christoph U.; Findling, Robert L.; Lucas, Judith; Crystal, Stephen; Jensen, Peter S.
Journal
Journal of Child and Adolescent Psychopharmacology , Volume 21 (6) Mary Ann Liebert – Dec 1, 2011
Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Copyright
Copyright 2011, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Subject
Original Articles
ISSN
1044-5463
eISSN
1557-8992
D.O.I.
10.1089/cap.2010.0128
Publisher site
Get PDF