• Title/Summary/Keyword: emotional and behavioural problem

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Human Figure Drawings by Children with Emotional and Behavioural Problems (유아의 문제행동 유·무에 따른 인물화검사 비교연구)

  • Park, Yeon Kyoung;Hwang, Hye Jung
    • Korean Journal of Child Studies
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.347-360
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    • 2001
  • In order to analyze the human figure drawings of children with emotional and behavioural problems, the Preschool Behaviour Checklist (McGuire & Richman, 1988) was administered to 300 6-year-old children from which 15 boys and 15 girls with emotional and behavioural problems and 15 boys and 15 girls without problems were selected for the target and comparison groups, respectively. Compared with children without emotional and behavioural problems, the human figure drawings of the disturbed children included immature eye drawings; immature liaison of body and arms or legs; no hair; strong and repeated lines; unbalanced arms and legs; unbalanced size of face, body, arms, and legs; and the size of the human figure less than a fifth of the sheet of paper. These results imply that the human figure drawing test is an efficient way to screen children's emotional and behavioural problems.

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The Significance of Affective Problems in Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (강박장애에서 정서 이상의 의미)

  • Hwang, Syung-Shick;Roh, Dae-Young;Kim, Chan-Hyung
    • Anxiety and mood
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    • v.6 no.1
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    • pp.10-16
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    • 2010
  • Researchers consider obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) to be an anxiety disorder, but it often shows comorbidity with other disorders in the affective spectrum. Epidemiological and clinical studies have shown a strong association between OCD and mood disorders. In addition, some reports show the patients with OCD have attentional-processing impairments regarding emotional information. However, research has not revealed the exact nature and degree to which OCD constitutes an affective problem. In this review, we discuss the affective aspects of OCD and the relationship between OCD and mood disorders.

How to Improve Eating Behaviour during Early Childhood

  • Green, Robin John;Samy, Gamal;Miqdady, Mohamad Saleh;Salah, Mohamed;Sleiman, Rola;Abdelrahman, Hatim Mohamed Ahmed;Al Haddad, Fatima;Reda, Mona M.;Lewis, Humphrey;Ekanem, Emmanuel E.;Vandenplas, Yvan
    • Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology & Nutrition
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.1-9
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    • 2015
  • Eating behaviour disorder during early childhood is a common pediatric problem. Many terminologies have been used interchangeably to describe this condition, hindering implementation of therapy and confusing a common problem. The definition suggests an eating behaviour which has consequences for family harmony and growth. The recent Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition does not cover the entire spectrum seen by pediatricians. Publications are substantive but level of evidence is most of the time low. This purpose of this review is to clarify terminology of eating behaviour problems during early childhood; including benign picky eating, limited diets, sensory food aversion, selective eating, food avoidance emotional disorder, pervasive refusal syndrome, tactile defensiveness, functional dysphagia, neophobia and toddler anorexia. This tool is proposed only to ease the clinical management for child care providers. Diagnostic criteria are set and management tools are suggested. The role of dietary counselling and, where necessary, behavioural therapy is clarified. It is hoped that the condition will make its way into mainstream pediatrics to allow these children, and their families, to receive the help they deserve.