Literature DB >> 21338001

Adolescent offenders with mental disorders.

Thomas Grisso1.   

Abstract

Thomas Grisso points out that youth with mental disorders make up a significant subgroup of youth who appear in U.S. juvenile courts. And he notes that juvenile justice systems today are struggling to determine how best to respond to those youths' needs, both to safeguard their own welfare and to reduce re-offending and its consequences for the community. In this article, Grisso examines research and clinical evidence that may help in shaping a public policy that addresses that question. Clinical science, says Grisso, offers a perspective that explains why the symptoms of mental disorders in adolescence can increase the risk of impulsive and aggressive behaviors. Research on delinquent populations suggests that youth with mental disorders are, indeed, at increased risk for engaging in behaviors that bring them to the attention of the juvenile justice system. Nevertheless, evidence indicates that most youth arrested for delinquencies do not have serious mental disorders. Grisso explains that a number of social phenomena of the past decade, such as changes in juvenile law and deficiencies in the child mental health system, appear to have been responsible for bringing far more youth with mental disorders into the juvenile justice system. Research shows that almost two-thirds of youth in juvenile justice detention centers and correctional facilities today meet criteria for one or more mental disorders. Calls for a greater emphasis on mental health treatment services in juvenile justice, however, may not be the best answer. Increasing such services in juvenile justice could simply mean that youth would need to be arrested in order to get mental health services. Moreover, many of the most effective treatment methods work best when applied in the community, while youth are with their families rather than removed from them. A more promising approach, argues Grisso, could be to develop community systems of care that create a network of services cutting across public child welfare agency boundaries. This would allow the juvenile justice system to play a more focused and limited treatment role. This role would include emergency mental health services for youth in its custody and more substantial mental health care only for the smaller share of youth who cannot be treated safely in the community. www.futureofchildren.org

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Year:  2008        PMID: 21338001     DOI: 10.1353/foc.0.0016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Future Child        ISSN: 1054-8289


  15 in total

1.  Crime and psychiatric disorders among youth in the US population: an analysis of the National Comorbidity Survey-Adolescent Supplement.

Authors:  Kendell L Coker; Philip H Smith; Alexander Westphal; Howard V Zonana; Sherry A McKee
Journal:  J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry       Date:  2014-06-12       Impact factor: 8.829

2.  Effcacy of Williams LifeSkills Training in improving psychological health of Chinese male juvenile violent offenders: a randomized controlled study.

Authors:  Simei Zhang; Hong Wang; Chen Chen; Jiansong Zhou; Xiaoping Wang
Journal:  Neurosci Bull       Date:  2015-01-06       Impact factor: 5.203

3.  Joint consideration of distal and proximal predictors of premature mortality among serious juvenile offenders.

Authors:  Laurie Chassin; Alex R Piquero; Sandra H Losoya; Andre D Mansion; Carol A Schubert
Journal:  J Adolesc Health       Date:  2013-02-14       Impact factor: 5.012

4.  "Falling Through the Cracks:" Young Adults, Drugs, and Incarceration.

Authors:  Alwyn T Cohall
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2016-06       Impact factor: 9.308

5.  The nature and prevalence of psychiatric disorders in a Sudanese juvenile correctional facility.

Authors:  Ayaa Siddig Abdelrahman Ali; Mohamed Ali Awadelkarim
Journal:  Sudan J Paediatr       Date:  2016

6.  Multisystem-Involved Youth: A Developmental Framework and Implications for Research, Policy, and Practice.

Authors:  Sarah Vidal; Christian M Connell; Dana M Prince; Jacob Kraemer Tebes
Journal:  Adolesc Res Rev       Date:  2018-06-27

7.  Juvenile mental health courts for adjudicated youth: role implications for child and adolescent psychiatric mental health nurses.

Authors:  F Antoinette Burriss; Alfiee M Breland-Noble; Joe L Webster; Jose A Soto
Journal:  J Child Adolesc Psychiatr Nurs       Date:  2011-05

8.  HIV prevention for juvenile drug court offenders: a randomized controlled trial focusing on affect management.

Authors:  Marina Tolou-Shams; Christopher Houck; Selby M Conrad; Nicholas Tarantino; L A R Stein; Larry K Brown
Journal:  J Correct Health Care       Date:  2011-04-07

9.  The Effect of Race/Ethnicity on the Relation between Substance Use Disorder Diagnosis and Substance Use Treatment Receipt among Male Serious Adolescent Offenders.

Authors:  Andre D Mansion; Laurie Chassin
Journal:  Child Youth Serv Rev       Date:  2016-02-01

10.  Effects of Institutional Confinement for Delinquency on Levels of Depression and Anxiety among Male Adolescents.

Authors:  Helene R White; Jing Shi; Paul Hirschfield; Eun-Young Mun; Rolf Loeber
Journal:  Youth Violence Juv Justice       Date:  2010-04-22
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