Symptomatology of adopted and nonadopted adolescents in a psychiatric hospital |
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Authors: | A Weiss |
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Abstract: | This study compared the symptomatology and diagnoses of adopted and nonadopted adolescents in a psychiatric hospital. Data were gathered from the hospital charts of adolescents who already had been discharged from the hospital. Contrary to expectations, adoptees were no more likely than nonadoptees to have received personality disorder diagnoses, nor were they more likely to be hospitalized as the result of antisocial behavior. However, in comparison with nonadopted adolescents, the adopted adolescents were younger upon admission to the hospital, significantly less often diagnosed psychotic, and significantly more often diagnosed adjustment reaction. It was suggested that adopted adolescents may be less likely than nonadopted adolescents to require severe or prolonged pathology in order to be admitted to a psychiatric hospital. It was also suggested that the antisocial symptomatology so frequently observed in adopted children in mental health settings does not account for the hospitalizations of those receiving inpatient treatment. |
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