Sections
Aggression and Violence: Introduction | Definition and Clinical Description | Epidemiology | Etiology, Mechanisms, and Risk Factors | Genetic Factors | Social-Environmental Factors | Prevention | Course and Prognosis | Evaluation | Mental Status Examination | Treatment | Research Directions | References
Excerpt
Aggression is one of the most frequent indications
for child and adolescent psychiatric referral, often in association
with severe and emergent symptomatology—yet aggression
is a normal behavior, present in all people to some extent. The
nature, meaning, and prevalence of aggression in children differ
as a function of developmental level and context, and it is important
to distinguish "pathological," "maladaptive," or "antisocial" manifestations
of aggression from "prosocial" or adaptive behaviors
(e.g., self-defense). Aggression is generally considered to be a highly
stable behavioral trait. Nevertheless, only half of school-age children
who are aggressive continue to manifest this behavior in adolescence.
When aggression persists, it is highly impairing and often carries severe
consequences for academic achievement and occupational attainment,
family and peer relationships, and psychological development, as
well as risk for dire outcomes—including antisocial personality disorder,
substance abuse, and criminality.