Affiliation:
1. School of Psychology University of Birmingham Birmingham UK
2. School of Psychology, College of Health and Life Sciences Aston University Birmingham UK
3. School of Psychology University of Surrey Guildford UK
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundAggressive behaviours are common in people with neurodevelopmental conditions, contributing to poorer quality of life and placement breakdown. However, there is limited empirical research documenting the prevalence and persistence of aggressive behaviours in autism. In this longitudinal study, aggressive behaviours were investigated in a sample of autistic individuals over 10 years.MethodsCaregivers of autistic individuals, both with and without intellectual disability, completed questionnaires relating to the presence of aggressive behaviours atT1[N = 229, mean age in years 11.8, standard deviation (SD) 5.9],T2(T1 + 3 years,N = 81, mean age in years 15.1, SD 5.9) andT3(T1 + 10 years,N = 54, mean age in years 24.5, SD 8.1). Analyses examined the presence and persistence of aggressive behaviours and the predictive value of established correlates of aggression.ResultsAggressive behaviours were common at baseline (61.6%) but only persistent in 30% of the sample over 10 years. Higher composite scores of overactivity and impulsivity atT1were significantly associated with the persistence of aggressive behaviours atT2(P = 0.027) andT3(P = 0.012) with medium effect size.ConclusionsAggressive behaviours are common in autism, but reduce with age. Behavioural correlates of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) predict the presence and persistence of aggressive behaviour and as such may be useful clinical indicators to direct proactive intervention resources to ameliorate aggressive behaviours.
Funder
Autism Research Foundation
Cerebra
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Neurology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Rehabilitation
Cited by
6 articles.
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