Source-specific oppositional defiant disorder: Comorbidity and risk factors in referred elementary schoolboys

DAG Drabick, KD Gadow, JAN Loney - … of the American Academy of Child …, 2007 - Elsevier
DAG Drabick, KD Gadow, JAN Loney
Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2007Elsevier
OBJECTIVE: To examine differences in risk factors and comorbid conditions for oppositional
defiant disorder (ODD) symptom groups in a sample of 248 elementary schoolboys (ages 6-
10) recruited from 1994 to 1996. METHOD: The boys and their mothers received multiple
assessments of cognitive, behavioral, academic, and family functioning, including a clinic-
based evaluation in Stony Brook, NY. ODD was defined using four different strategies for
aggregating data from mother and teacher reports of DSM-IV symptoms. RESULTS: Source …
OBJECTIVE
To examine differences in risk factors and comorbid conditions for oppositional defiant disorder (ODD) symptom groups in a sample of 248 elementary schoolboys (ages 6-10) recruited from 1994 to 1996.
METHOD
The boys and their mothers received multiple assessments of cognitive, behavioral, academic, and family functioning, including a clinic-based evaluation in Stony Brook, NY. ODD was defined using four different strategies for aggregating data from mother and teacher reports of DSM-IV symptoms.
RESULTS
Source-specific ODD symptom groups had better internal validity and were more differentiated than groups defined using the other strategies. The mother-defined ODD symptom group (ODD/M) had higher levels of maternal detachment than the teacher-defined symptom group (ODD/T), and the ODD/T group had more social problems than the ODD/M group. The classification agreement group (ODD/M + T) evidenced higher levels of sensation-seeking, maternal control, and comorbid symptoms than the ODD/M and ODD/T groups. Controlling for co-occurring attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and conduct disorder symptoms altered some of the relationships among ODD, comorbid symptoms, and psychosocial correlates.
CONCLUSIONS
Patterns of co-occurring psychiatric symptoms and psychosocial correlates of ODD symptom groups varied depending on the rater(s) used to determine group membership. Results support continued research into source specificity for conceptualizing ODD.
Elsevier
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