Barbaresi William J, Katusic Slavica K, Colligan Robert C, Weaver Amy L, Jacobsen Steven J
Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Division of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2007 Aug;28(4):265-73. doi: 10.1097/DBP.0b013e31811ff87d.
The purpose of this study was to compare long-term school outcomes (academic achievement in reading, absenteeism, grade retention, and school dropout) for children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD) versus those without AD/HD.
Subjects included 370 children with research-identified AD/HD from a 1976-1982 population-based birth cohort (N = 5718) and 740 non-AD/HD control subjects from the same birth cohort, matched by gender and age. All subjects were retrospectively followed from birth until a median age of 18.4 years (AD/HD cases) or 18.3 years (non-AD/HD controls). The complete school record for each subject was reviewed to obtain information on reading achievement (last available California Achievement Test reading score), absenteeism (number/percentage of school days absent at each grade level), grade retention (having to repeat an entire grade in the subsequent school year), and school dropout (failure to graduate from high school).
Median reading achievement scores at age 12.8 years (expressed as a national percentile) were significantly different for AD/HD cases and non-AD/HD controls (45 vs 73). Results were similar for both boys and girls with AD/HD. Median percentage of days absent was statistically significantly higher for children with AD/HD versus those without AD/HD, although the difference was relatively small in absolute number of days absent. Subjects with AD/HD were three times more likely to be retained a grade. Similarly, subjects with AD/HD were 2.7 times more likely to drop out before high school graduation (22.9%) than non-AD/HD controls (10.0%).
The results of this population-based study clearly demonstrate the association between AD/HD and poor long-term school outcomes.
本研究旨在比较患有注意力缺陷多动障碍(AD/HD)的儿童与未患AD/HD的儿童的长期学业成果(阅读成绩、缺勤情况、留级和辍学)。
研究对象包括1976年至1982年基于人群的出生队列中的370名经研究确定患有AD/HD的儿童(N = 5718)以及来自同一出生队列的740名非AD/HD对照对象,按性别和年龄进行匹配。所有研究对象均从出生开始进行回顾性随访,直至中位年龄18.4岁(AD/HD病例组)或18.3岁(非AD/HD对照组)。审查每个研究对象的完整学校记录,以获取阅读成绩(最后一次可用的加利福尼亚成就测试阅读分数)、缺勤情况(各年级缺勤天数/百分比)、留级(在随后学年必须重读整个年级)和辍学(未从高中毕业)的信息。
12.8岁时的阅读成绩中位数(以全国百分位数表示)在AD/HD病例组和非AD/HD对照组之间存在显著差异(45对73)。患有AD/HD的男孩和女孩的结果相似。AD/HD儿童的缺勤天数中位数在统计学上显著高于未患AD/HD的儿童,尽管缺勤天数的绝对差异相对较小。患有AD/HD的研究对象留级的可能性是未患AD/HD的研究对象的三倍。同样,患有AD/HD的研究对象在高中毕业前辍学的可能性(22.9%)是非AD/HD对照组(10.0%)的2.7倍。
这项基于人群的研究结果清楚地表明了AD/HD与不良长期学业成果之间的关联。