Comparison of delinquent children with single and repeated criminal behavior in terms of various variables
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17986/blm.1743Keywords:
Forensic Psychiatry, Child, Juvenile Delinquency, Risk Factors, CrimeAbstract
Objective: Determining risk factors in juvenile delinquents (JD) has gained significance in preventive psychiatry. This study aims to assess the sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of JD and to determine whether there are differences in the various variable comparisons between single and repeat offender children.
Methods: The data of a total of 256 JDs cases out of 1350 forensic cases who underwent forensic examination at a university hospital’s child and adolescent psychiatry outpatient clinic between 2013 and 2023 were included.
Results: The mean age at the time of the first crime for 256 JDs was 14.04±1.28, with 44 (17.2%) exhibiting recurrent criminal behavior. Recurrent criminal behavior group had a higher rate of accompanying psychopathology compared to the group with single criminal behavior (p=0.009). In the group with recurrent crimes, statistically significant higher rates of school absenteeism (p<0.001), school dropout (p<0.001), history of domestic violence (p=0.005), tobacco use (p<0.001), alcohol use (p=0.02), substance use (p<0.001), self-harming behavior (p=0.008), household chaos (p<0.001), family history of crime (p<0.001), parental history of imprisonment (p<0.001), juvenile history of imprisonment (p<0.001), and intellectual disability (p=0.001) were found.
Conclusions: Ensuring the involvement of children in the school system, providing regular follow-ups and psychosocial support mechanisms for children with a family history of crime and experiencing domestic violence, and facilitating parental employment can be suggested as crime-preventive interventions to reduce the likelihood of recurrence of criminal behavior in children with singular criminal conduct.
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