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Establishing the constructs of childhood behavioral disturbances in a Chinese population: A questionnaire study
Authors:T P Ho  Patrick W L Leung  Ernest S L Luk  Eric Taylor  John Bacon-Shone  Felice Lieh Mak
Institution:(1) Department of Psychiatry, University of Hong Kong, Queen Mary Hospital, Pokfulam, Hong Kong;(2) Department of Psychology, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong;(3) Department of Psychiatry, University of Melbourne, Australia;(4) Institute of Psychiatry, MRC Child Psychiatry Unit, London, United Kingdom;(5) Department of Statistics, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Abstract:The behavioral problems of Chinese children were examined in a questionnaire study of a representative sample of 3,069 seven-year-old Chinese schoolboys in Hong Kong using Rutter's questionnaires for completion by parents and teachers. Separate robust dimensions of hyperactivity, antisocial, and neurotic behaviors were evident. The correlations among different dimensions were similar to those reported in the West. Short-term longitudinal analysis suggested that these dimensions were stable over time and that antisocial behaviors might develop in hyperactive children. The finding highlights the necessity of differentiating the hyperactive domain from the antisocial one. A significant source effect was found in all three dimensions. Chinese schoolboys had nearly two times the level of questionnaire-rated hyperactivity compared with school boys in the West; but it is premature to conclude that hyperactivity is more common in Chinese schoolboys in Hong Kong. Cross-cultural differences in adults' expectations and tolerance remain a plausible explanation.This study was supported by the Croucher Foundation. We would like to thank the Education Department of Hong Kong for assistance in sampling. We are particularly grateful to the children, teachers, and parents who participated in this study.
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