History
Onset
Diagnosis/Symptoms
Treatments
Fun facts
100

When was the first documentation of conduct disorder?

What is...

1880

100

What is the most common ages of onset?

What is...

10-16 years old

100

What are three symptoms of conduct disorder?

What are...

Bullying, threats, destroying property, running away from home, using weapon, forced sexual activity, lying to obtain goods/favors, etc. 

100

What factors will depend on the treatment for the child?

What are...

Symptoms, severity, age, and general health 

100

What disorder do most children develop in their adulthoods after an original diagnosis of conduct disorder?

What is...

Antisocial personality disorder

200

When was conduct disorder established as a medical diagnosis?

What is...

1968

200

Who is at higher risk of developing conduct disorder?

What is...

Boys, disadvantaged/dysfunctional homes, people who have faced trauma, people who have brain damage

200

What are the four categories of conduct disorder?

What are...

Aggression to people and animals

Destruction of property

Deceitfulness or theft

Serious violations of rules 

200

How can cognitive behavioral therapy help?

What is...

It allows children to learn how to better solve problems, communicate, handle stress, and control their impulses/anger 

200

What type of parenting leads to behavioral problems that lead to a conduct disorder diagnosis?

What is...

Lack of supervision, ineffective discipline, coddling household

300

What disorder emerged from conduct disorder during original diagnosis?

What is...

Oppositional defiant disorder

300

What are other mental disorders that are common with a conduct disorder diagnosis?

What are...

Anxiety, ADHD, depression, 

300

What are the three severities of symptoms?

What are...

Mild, Moderate, Severe

300

What is the benefit of therapy?

What is...

Family therapy and peer therapy help the child develop better social and interpersonal skills

300

What is the clinical prevalence of children to adolescent patients in hospital settings are diagnosed with conduct disorder? (%)

What is...

More than 1/3 (33%)

400

What is a factor that changed in society that led to the diagnosis of conduct disorder?

What is...

A higher presence of children in public 

400

How is the onset of the diagnosis classified? 

What is...

Childhood onset, Adolescent onset, Unspecified onset

400

How long must 3+ symptoms be present for a diagnosis?

What is...

12 months

400

What symptoms of conduct disorder do medications help?

What are...

Aggression, mood issues, and other mental disorders

400

Name one controversy among medical professionals regarding conduct disorder?

What is...

Whether external factors should be considered in the process of diagnosing conduct disorder. They argue it should be more biological/genetic than environmental. 

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