Stable prediction of mood and anxiety disorders based on behavioral and emotional problems in childhood: a 14-year follow-up during childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood
OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to predict the onset of mood and
anxiety disorders from parent-reported emotional and behavioral problems
in childhood across a 14-year period from childhood into young adulthood.
METHOD: In 1983, parent reports of behavioral and emotional problems were
obtained with the Child Behavior Checklist for children and adolescents
4-16 years of age from the Dutch general population. At follow-up 14 years
later, lifetime mood and anxiety diagnoses were obtained by a standardized
DSM-IV interview for 1,580 subjects. Cox proportional hazards models were
used to predict the incidence of mood and anxiety disorders from childhood
problems and demographic covariates. RESULTS: Mood disorders were
significantly predicted by high scores on the anxious/depressed scale and
on the internalizing composite (withdrawn, somatic complaints, and
anxious/depressed). Anxiety disorders were significantly predicted by the
social problems scale and the externalizing composite (delinquent behavior
and aggressive behavior). Anxiety disorders predominantly started in
childhood and early adolescence, whereas the incidence of mood disorders
increased sharply in adolescence and young adulthood. CONCLUSIONS: These
results suggest different developmental pathways for mood and anxiety
disorders. The predictions based on problem behavior remained stable
during the 14-year period across adolescence and young adulthood. The
results therefore underline the importance of early intervention and
prevention of behavioral and emotional problems in childhood