Background An anti-social lifestyle has been found to be associated with a higher likelihood of injury but a lower likelihood of organic illness up to the age of 32 years. It is not known if these associations persist into the fifth decade nor whether adverse health conditions are differently distributed across distinct offending trajectories. Hypotheses Hypotheses were that adverse health outcomes by the age of 48 years would vary across distinct trajectories and specifically that poor health would be most pronounced amongst the highest-rate chronic offenders, even after controlling for childhood individual and environmental risk factors. Methods Injury and illness data were collected prospectively from boys of age 8 years in the course of...
Background: To investigate the impact of adolescent violent and non-violent criminality and subseque...
Much is known about the patterning of offending throughout life, but less about the patterning of vi...
Much research has examined Moffitt\u27s developmental taxonomy, focusing almost exclusively on the d...
Background An anti-social lifestyle has been found to be associated with a higher likelihood of inju...
The objectives of this study were to determine relations between offending and health, and how illne...
Background Antisocial lifestyle includes a range of related behaviours which constitute threats to h...
An antisocial lifestyle is associated with injury but also with less organic illness up to the age o...
Funder: Economic and Social Research Council; Id: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000269BACKGROUND:...
Criminal offending has many negative outcomes. Researchers have recently begun to consider the impac...
Longitudinal investigations of associations between offending and health are rare. Studies which hav...
This article reports a comparison on outcomes of 26-year-old males who were defined several years ag...
Abstract: The relationship between childhood neglect and later life outcomes is an understudied topi...
Objectives: This paper set out to contribute to the literature by linking research into offending pa...
The Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development is a prospective longitudinal survey of the developmen...
Linking recently collected data to form what is arguably the longest longitudinal study of crime to ...
Background: To investigate the impact of adolescent violent and non-violent criminality and subseque...
Much is known about the patterning of offending throughout life, but less about the patterning of vi...
Much research has examined Moffitt\u27s developmental taxonomy, focusing almost exclusively on the d...
Background An anti-social lifestyle has been found to be associated with a higher likelihood of inju...
The objectives of this study were to determine relations between offending and health, and how illne...
Background Antisocial lifestyle includes a range of related behaviours which constitute threats to h...
An antisocial lifestyle is associated with injury but also with less organic illness up to the age o...
Funder: Economic and Social Research Council; Id: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000269BACKGROUND:...
Criminal offending has many negative outcomes. Researchers have recently begun to consider the impac...
Longitudinal investigations of associations between offending and health are rare. Studies which hav...
This article reports a comparison on outcomes of 26-year-old males who were defined several years ag...
Abstract: The relationship between childhood neglect and later life outcomes is an understudied topi...
Objectives: This paper set out to contribute to the literature by linking research into offending pa...
The Cambridge Study in Delinquent Development is a prospective longitudinal survey of the developmen...
Linking recently collected data to form what is arguably the longest longitudinal study of crime to ...
Background: To investigate the impact of adolescent violent and non-violent criminality and subseque...
Much is known about the patterning of offending throughout life, but less about the patterning of vi...
Much research has examined Moffitt\u27s developmental taxonomy, focusing almost exclusively on the d...