Levels of hopelessness in children and adolescents: a developmental perspective.

JH Kashani, JC Reid, TK Rosenberg�- Journal of Consulting and�…, 1989 - psycnet.apa.org
JH Kashani, JC Reid, TK Rosenberg
Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1989psycnet.apa.org
We investigated hopelessness at 3 age levels (8-, 12-, and 17-year-olds) in 210 children
and adolescents from a community sample derived from public school listings of 4,810
children in a midwestern college town. The sample included 105 boys and 105 girls, and
there were 70 subjects in each age group. The major finding was that children with high
hopelessness scores are at greater risk not only for suicide and depression as revealed by
the Child Assessment Schedule and the Birleson Depression Scale but also for overall�…
Abstract
We investigated hopelessness at 3 age levels (8-, 12-, and 17-year-olds) in 210 children and adolescents from a community sample derived from public school listings of 4,810 children in a midwestern college town. The sample included 105 boys and 105 girls, and there were 70 subjects in each age group. The major finding was that children with high hopelessness scores are at greater risk not only for suicide and depression as revealed by the Child Assessment Schedule and the Birleson Depression Scale but also for overall psychopathology. This study suggests that hopelessness does not increase from preadolescence to adolescence in a general population.(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
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