|
Home
Products
Ordering
Information:
How
to Order
Distributors
Translations
For
Students or Training Programs
Site
and Scoring Licenses
Information
for Parents
Samples
of Forms
Multicultural
Applications
Societies
with Multicultural Scoring
Reliability
and Validity
Information
for:
Preschool
(CBCL-LDS, C-TRF)
School-Age
(CBCL, TRF, YSR, SCICA,
TOF,
DOF, NEW! BPM)
Adults
(ABCL, ASR)
Older
Adults (OABCL, OASR)
Software
(ADM, Web-Link,
WebForms Direct,
RTS, A2S)
Bibliography
Research:
About
Us:
ASEBA
Overview
ASEBA
Origins
ASEBA
Subsequent Developments
ASEBA
Recent Advances
Support:
FAQs
Join
Listserv
Holiday
Schedule
Privacy
Policy
Copyright,
Trademarks & Disclaimers
Contact
Us
News
|
Parent-
and Self-Reported Problems of German Children With Growth Deficiency
of Different Etiologies
Some
studies of children with growth deficiency have found elevated
rates of behavioral and emotional problems, whereas other studies
have not. The differences in findings might reflect differences
in the settings where children were evaluated, differences in
the etiologies of growth deficiency, differences in informants,
or differences in assessment instruments. To address these variations,
Steinhausen et al. (2001) obtained CBCL/4-18 and YSR ratings of
German children evaluated at 68 centers for growth deficiency
having different etiologies. Compared to German norms, the growth
deficient children obtained significantly elevated scores on all
CBCL/4-18 and YSR problem scales. These findings did not differ
significantly in relation to the diagnosed etiology of growth
deficiency, age, gender, socioeconomic status, nor the degree
of deficiency in either growth or growth hormone. Steinhausen
et al. concluded that "the adjustment problems of short-statured
children function more in a categorical way rather than in a dose-related
way" (p. 427). In addition, they concluded that "The
scores across the eight primary scales of the CBCL and YSR are
also surprisingly similar with a peak for social problems in both
questionnaires," but that "it is imperative to use both
sources of information to get a full picture of behavioral adjustment
in children with short stature" (p. 427).
Reference: Steinhausen, H-C., Dorr, H.G., Kannenberg,
R., & Malin, Z. (2001). The behavior profile of children and
adolescents with short stature. Journal of Developmental and
Behavioral Pediatrics, 21, 423-428.
|