Chicago Tribune |
Northwestern study finds most persistent and prevalent psychiatric
problem is substance-use disorder, especially for males
Mental health researcher Erika Ostrander never knows how the interviews
she conducts with teenagers who have spent time at the Cook County Temporary
Juvenile Detention Center will go. "Every day is different. I never know
what I'm going to run into: from people doing well, to people running into
violence, to psychological distress," said Ostrander, who is a clinical
field interviewer with the Northwestern Project, an effort at Northwestern
University's medical school that its leaders say is the first large-scale,
longitudinal study of the mental health needs and outcomes of delinquent youth.
"They share their experience living in parts of the city where violence is
prevalent. … You learn a lot about people, in general. It's not always bad. You
see someone in a traumatic environment, with a lot of obstacles, who is able to
get through them, to stable jobs and families."
A total of 1,829 males and females, who ranged in age from 10 to 18 when
they were first interviewed at the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention
Center between 1995 and 1998, have participated in the project. They have since
been reinterviewed up to five years later, at most four times. The work of
Ostrander and others on the project, which began in 1995, has resulted in a
series of scientific studies, the latest published this month in the Archives
of General Psychiatry.
That study, titled "Prevalence and Persistence of Psychiatric
Disorders in Youth After Detention," found that five years after they
leave detention, almost 30 percent of females are affected by one or more
psychiatric disorders and more than 45 percent of males are affected by one or
more psychiatric disorders. "Our study demonstrates that of the kids who
come in to detention, many have psychiatric disorders. Many of them do OK. Many
have disorders that persist as they age," said Linda Teplin, a professor
of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Northwestern and the lead author of
the paper.
The most persistent and prevalent psychiatric problem is substance-use
disorder, including both illicit drugs and alcohol, which is two to three times
more likely to affect males than females. As they age, young women experience a
more dramatic decrease in the occurrence of this disorder than young men do. "We
need to improve services for kids," Teplin said. "People have done a
great job recognizing girls' needs." The next step is to address the needs
of young men, she said.
Males make up 70 percent of juvenile arrests and 85 percent of the youth
in correctional facilities, according to the paper and the Census of Juveniles
in Residential Placement. "We need to develop preventive interventions
when kids return to communities," Teplin said. She recommends improving
the link with mental health services "to prevent a revolving door between
correctional facilities and communities."
John Landsverk, director of the Child and Adolescent Services Research
Center at Rady Children's Hospital-San Diego, called the study
"exceptionally good." "It was very effective, first-rate
epidemiology, Landsverk said. "There is really not another study in the
United States of this size and of this rigor, and, I think, pretty interesting
outcomes." Research that involves youth is much more difficult to do, he
said. "It takes a lot of money and enormous persistence. It's a very
carefully written paper."
The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. "We always try to look for positive
outcomes," Ostrander said. "I see a lot of people with strong
perseverance. They keep trying. I'm a true believer that kids need a role
model. It's key that there are role models in the community. When you provide
positive role models for kids, if they have a connection, if they have somebody
they can look up to, that can really make a difference."
Source: Chicago Tribune
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