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Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is estimated to affect between
0.5% and 2% of children and adolescents. The majority of clinical cases
has both obsessions and compulsions. Depression, anxiety and tic
disorders are common comorbid diagnoses, and assessment can therefore
be complex. Several theories have been proposed for the aetiology and
maintenance of the disorder, including cognitive-behavioural and
neuropsychiatric theories. Cognitive-behavioural and pharmacological
treatments are both probably efficacious therapies for children and
adolescents but further research is needed to compare these treatments
with each other, and to examine the use of combination therapies in
controlled trials.
Professionals working in child and adolescent mental health services are
increasingly encouraged to examine the evidence underlying their clinical
practice. Embracing evidence-based practice can present difficulties, as
barriers to changing practice exist. These difficulties are examined, along
with the meaning of evidence-based practice in a multidisciplinary
speciality, and the potential benefits that develop from it.
The argument for evidence-based child and adolescent
mental health services is irresistible. Indeed, I have yet to
meet a mental health practitioner who has told me that his
or her work was not based on evidence. The exam
question, however, is ‘what is the best evidence?’ In a
helpful contribution to the current debate about evidence-based practice, Ramchandani, Joughin and Zwi point out
that the answer depends on what the question was in the
first place. They argue that while some clinical questions
are best tackled using quantitative methods such as
randomised trials, other questions are better answered
using different techniques. Traditional hierarchies of
evidence that give primacy to randomised trials may not
always be appropriate to child mental health practice.
Reviews of the literature on attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) typically begin early in the twentieth century with the descriptions
provided by paediatrician George Still. Physician Alexander Crichton,
however, described all of the essential features of the Inattentive subtype
of ADHD more than a century earlier than Still. This article presents a short
biography of Crichton, looks at his 1798 publication describing attentional
disorders in otherwise healthy individuals, contrasts his medical writing
with the moralism of Still, and shows how his thoughts and observations
are very much in accord with DSM-IV criteria for the Inattentive subtype of
ADHD.
This review outlines some of the difficulties involved in assessing
preschool children's language development. Language is a sensitive
indicator of a range of developmental difficulties yet the accurate
identification of children who are experiencing delays or disorders is
problematic. A range of different approaches are used to identify and
assess language problems including norm-referenced assessments,
questionnaires and language samples. Each of these is critically evaluated.
In particular the reliability and validity of the measures and their ability to
discriminate atypical patterns of development is considered. It is concluded
that there are no simple assessment tools that identify and assess language
development. Moreover, the use of single measures is considered
inadequate for determining whether a child at any age has typical or
delayed language. Ways to circumvent the limitations of the assessment
tools are considered.
When Philip Graham takes up the Chair of
the Association next June, it will be his
second term in an office he originally held
in 1982. Although he would modestly deny
it, he is not only one of the UK's leading
child and adolescent psychiatrists, but also
widely respected internationally. Outside
this country his reputation is particularly
strong in Europe where he was President of
the European Society for Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry from 1987 to 1991. His
appointment to the Foundation Chair of
Child Psychiatry at the Institute of Child
Health in 1975 marked the establishment
of the second such chair in the UK. The
esteem in which he was held there led to
his appointment as Dean of the Institute
from 1985 to 1990. On retirement in 1994
he was elected to the Chair of the
National Children's Bureau, reflecting
his broad perspective on the welfare of
children.