6 results on '"Ploubidis, George B."'
Search Results
2. Changes in the adult consequences of adolescent mental ill-health: findings from the 1958 and 1970 British birth cohorts.
- Author
-
Thompson, Ellen J., Richards, Marcus, Ploubidis, George B., Fonagy, Peter, and Patalay, Praveetha
- Subjects
MULTIPLE regression analysis ,HEALTH status indicators ,REGRESSION analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,RESEARCH funding ,DISEASE prevalence ,ODDS ratio ,MENTAL illness ,LONGITUDINAL method ,ADULTS ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background: Adolescent mental health difficulties are increasing over time. However, it is not known whether their adulthood health and socio-economic sequelae are changing over time. Methods: Participants (N = 31 349) are from two prospective national birth cohort studies: 1958 National Child Development Study (n = 16 091) and the 1970 British Cohort Study (n = 15 258). Adolescent mental health was operationalised both as traditional internalising and externalising factors and a hierarchical bi-factor. Associations between adolescent psychopathology and age 42 health and wellbeing (mental health, general health, life satisfaction), social (cohabitation, voting behaviour) and economic (education and employment) outcomes are estimated using linear and logistic multivariable regressions across cohorts, controlling for a wide range of early life potential confounding factors. Results: The prevalence of adolescent mental health difficulties increased and their associations with midlife health, wellbeing, social and economic outcomes became more severe or remained similar between those born in 1958 and 1970. For instance, a stronger association with adolescent mental health difficulties was found for those born in 1970 for midlife psychological distress [odds ratio (OR) 1970 = 1.82 (1.65–1.99), OR 1958 = 1.60 (1.43–1.79)], cohabitation [OR 1970 = 0.64 (0.59–0.70), OR 1958 = 0.79 (0.72–0.87)], and professional occupations [OR 1970 = 0.75 (0.67–0.84), OR 1958 = 1.05 (0.88–1.24)]. The associations of externalising symptoms with later outcomes were mainly explained by their shared variance with internalising symptoms. Conclusion: The widening of mental health-based inequalities in midlife outcomes further supports the need to recognise that secular increases in adolescent mental health symptoms is a public health challenge with measurable negative consequences through the life-course. Increased public health efforts to minimise adverse outcomes are needed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The relationship between child behaviour problems at school entrance and teenage vocabulary acquisition: A comparison of two generations of British children born 30 years apart.
- Author
-
Parsons, Sam, Sullivan, Alice, Moulton, Vanessa, Fitzsimons, Emla, and Ploubidis, George B.
- Subjects
BEHAVIOR disorders in children ,COGNITIVE development ,VOCABULARY ,ADOLESCENCE ,SCHOOL entrance age - Abstract
Behaviour problems in early childhood have a lasting impact on cognitive development and education attainment in later adolescence and into adulthood. Here we address the relationship conduct and hyperactivity problems at school entrance, and vocabulary acquisition in adolescence. We compare performance in identical assessments across two generations of British children born 30 years apart in 1970 (n = 15,676) and 2000/2 (n = 16,628) and find that both conduct and hyperactivity problems have a negative association with later vocabulary in both generations. We take advantage of rich longitudinal birth cohort data and establish that these relationships hold once family socioeconomic status and a child's personal characteristics and earlier vocabulary acquisition are taken into account. We also find that teenagers today achieved substantively lower scores in the vocabulary assessment compared to their counterparts born 30 years earlier, and that this holds across all categories within each of the family and individual characteristics considered in this article. As vocabulary and language skills are key prerequisites for wider learning, we discuss implications the findings have for education policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Developmental cascades of internalising symptoms, externalising problems and cognitive ability from early childhood to middle adolescence.
- Author
-
Flouri, Eirini, Papachristou, Efstathios, Midouhas, Emily, Ploubidis, George B., Lewis, Glyn, and Joshi, Heather
- Subjects
COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
Abstract Background Cognitive ability and problem behaviour (externalising and internalising problems) are variable and inter-related in children. However, it is not known if they mutually influence one another, if difficulties in one cause difficulties in the other, or if they are related only because they share causes. Methods Random-intercept cross-lagged models adjusted for confounding were fitted to explore this in 17,318 (51% male) children of the UK's Millennium Cohort Study at ages 3, 5, 7, 11 and 14 years. Externalising and internalising problems were assessed using the parent-reported Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. Cognitive ability was measured using standardised scores of age-appropriate validated cognitive ability assessments. Where multiple cognitive assessments were available a single score was derived using principal components analysis. Results There was much evidence for cross-domain longitudinal effects in childhood, especially for cognitive ability (on both internalising and externalising problems and in both males and females) and externalising problems (on internalising problems in both genders and cognitive ability in males). Bidirectional effects were childhood-limited, gender-specific and less consistent. The consistent bidirectional associations were, in males, between externalising problems and cognitive ability, and, in females, between externalising and internalising problems (although the effects of internalising problems were weak). In adolescence, only externalising problems had cross-domain effects such that, in both genders, they were associated with lower cognitive ability in subsequent measurements and increased levels of internalising problems. Conclusions In either childhood or adolescence, reducing behavioural problems could have both emotional and cognitive benefits. In childhood, improving cognitive skills could reduce both emotional and behavioural problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Developmental pathways linking childhood and adolescent internalizing, externalizing, academic competence, and adolescent depression.
- Author
-
Weeks, Murray, Ploubidis, George B., Cairney, John, Wild, T. Cameron, Naicker, Kiyuri, and Colman, Ian
- Subjects
- *
COMPETITION (Psychology) in adolescence , *EXTERNALIZING behavior , *DEPRESSION in adolescence , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology , *ADOLESCENCE , *ADOLESCENT psychology , *CHILD development , *CHILD psychology , *COMPARATIVE studies , *MENTAL depression , *EDUCATIONAL tests & measurements , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *RESEARCH , *RESEARCH funding , *EVALUATION research , *EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
This study examined longitudinal pathways through three domains of adaptation from ages 4-5 to 14-15 (internalizing problems, externalizing problems, and academic competence) towards depressive symptoms at age 16-17. Participants were 6425 Canadian children followed bi-annually as part of the National Longitudinal Study of Children and Youth. Within-domain (i.e., stability) effects were moderate in strength. We found longitudinal cross-domain effects across one time point (i.e., one-lag cascades) between internalizing and externalizing in early childhood (positive associations), and between academic competence and externalizing in later childhood and adolescence (negative associations). We also found cascade effects over multiple time points (i.e., multi-lag cascades); lower academic competence at age 4-5 and greater internalizing at age 6-7 predicted greater age 12-13 externalizing, and greater age 6-7 externalizing predicted greater age 16-17 depression. Important pathways towards adolescent depression include a stability path through childhood and adolescent internalizing, as well as a number of potential paths involving all domains of adaptation, highlighting the multifactorial nature of adolescent depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Maternal psychological distress and child decision-making.
- Author
-
Flouri, Eirini, Ioakeimidi, Sofia, Midouhas, Emily, and Ploubidis, George B.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGY of mothers , *DECISION making , *MOTHER-child relationship , *PARENT-child relationships , *ATTITUDES of mothers , *ADOLESCENCE , *FAMILIES , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RISK-taking behavior , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *CHILDREN of people with mental illness , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background: There is much research to suggest that maternal psychological distress is associated with many adverse outcomes in children. This study examined, for the first time, if it is related to children's affective decision-making.Methods: Using data from 12,080 families of the Millennium Cohort Study, we modelled the effect of trajectories of maternal psychological distress in early-to-middle childhood (3-11 years) on child affective decision-making, measured with a gambling task at age 11.Results: Latent class analysis showed four longitudinal types of maternal psychological distress (chronically high, consistently low, moderate-accelerating and moderate-decelerating). Maternal distress typology predicted decision-making but only in girls. Specifically, compared to girls growing up in families with never-distressed mothers, those exposed to chronically high maternal psychological distress showed more risk-taking, bet more and exhibited poorer risk-adjustment, even after correction for confounding. Most of these effects on girls' decision-making were not robust to additional controls for concurrent internalising and externalising problems, but chronically high maternal psychological distress was associated positively with risk-taking even after this adjustment. Importantly, this association was similar for those who had reached puberty and those who had not.Limitations: Given the study design, causality cannot be inferred. Therefore, we cannot propose that treating chronic maternal psychological distress will reduce decision-making pathology in young females.Conclusions: Our study suggests that young daughters of chronically distressed mothers tend to be particularly reckless decision-makers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.