Janice Jones
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Janice Jones.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1997
Sharon Milberger; Joseph Biederman; Stephen V. Faraone; Lisa Chen; Janice Jones
OBJECTIVE The association between attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and cigarette smoking in children and adolescents was evaluated. METHOD Subjects were 6- to 17-year-old boys with DSM-III-R ADHD (n = 128) and non-ADHD comparison boys (n = 109) followed prospectively for 4 years into mid-adolescence. Information on cigarette smoking was obtained in a standardized manner blind to the probands clinical status. Cox proportional hazard models were used to predict cigarette smoking at follow-up using baseline characteristics as predictors. RESULTS ADHD was a significant predictor of cigarette smoking at follow-up into mid-adolescence. Our findings also revealed that ADHD was associated with an early initiation of cigarette smoking. This was the case even after controlling for socioeconomic status, IQ, and psychiatric comorbidity. In addition, among children with ADHD, there was a significant positive association between cigarette smoking and conduct, major depressive, and anxiety disorders. CONCLUSIONS ADHD, particularly the comorbid subtype, is a significant risk factor for early initiation of cigarette smoking in children and adolescents. Considering the prevalence and early childhood onset of ADHD, these findings highlight the importance of smoking prevention and cessation programs for children and adolescents with ADHD.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1998
Daniel A. Geller; Joseph Biederman; Janice Jones; Kenneth S. Park; Suzanne Schwartz; Stephanie Shapiro; Barbara J. Coffey
OBJECTIVE To examine the clinical correlates of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) in children and adolescents. METHOD A systematic review of the extant literature on juvenile OCD was conducted examining age at onset, gender distribution, symptom phenomenology, psychiatric comorbidity, neurological and perinatal history, family psychiatric history, cognitive and neuropsychological profiles, and treatment and outcome in juvenile OCD subjects. RESULTS Juvenile OCD was associated with a unique peak of age at onset indicating a bimodal incidence of the disorder, male preponderance, a distinct pattern of comorbidity with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and other developmental disorders as well as frequent associated neuropsychological deficits, an increased familial loading for OCD, and frequent absence of insight. CONCLUSION These findings show that juvenile OCD is associated with a unique set of correlates that appear to differ from findings reported in studies of adult OCD subjects. Although in need of confirmation, these findings suggest that juvenile OCD may be a developmental subtype of the disorder. Since juvenile OCD is likely to continue into adulthood, these findings stress the importance of considering age at onset in clinical and research studies of adults with OCD.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1996
Daniel A. Geller; Joseph Biederman; Susan Griffin; Janice Jones; Todd R. Lefkowitz
OBJECTIVE To examine the full spectrum of psychiatric comorbidity in juvenile obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) in a naturalistic manner when no exclusionary criteria are used for sample selection. METHOD Consecutive referrals to a specialized pediatric OCD clinic were evaluated by means of structured diagnostic interviews and rating scales. No exclusionary criteria were used for sample selection. Findings were compared with those of previously published reports of juvenile OCD. RESULTS Compared with previous studies, our sample of juveniles with OCD had high rates of comorbidity not only with tic, mood, and anxiety disorders but also with disruptive behavior disorders. CONCLUSIONS Our findings indicate that in the naturalistic setting, juvenile OCD is heavily comorbid with both internalizing and externalizing disorders. The presence of such a complex comorbid state has important clinical and research implications and stresses the relevance of limiting exclusionary criteria in studies of juvenile OCD.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1997
Larry J. Seidman; Joseph Biederman; Stephen V. Faraone; Wendy Weber; Douglas Mennin; Janice Jones
OBJECTIVE Attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is known to have neuropsychological consequences that are evident from psychological tests and from measures of school failure. However, most available data are based on studies of boys. Our goal was to assess, in this pilot study, whether ADHD in girls expressed neuropsychological features similar to those found in boys. METHOD Subjects were 43 girls, aged 6 to 17 years, with DSM-III-R ADHD and 36 comparison girls without ADHD. Information on neuropsychological performance was obtained in a standardized manner blind to clinical status. RESULTS Girls with ADHD were significantly more impaired on estimated IQ than comparison girls despite being matched on other demographic variables. Relative to comparison girls, the girls with ADHD were also significantly more impaired on the Freedom From Distractibility subtests of the WISC-R and on arithmetic and reading achievement scores. Although their mean performance on executive function tests was generally poorer than that of control girls, there were no statistically significant differences on these measures. CONCLUSIONS Girls with ADHD have impairments in some tests of attention and achievement. However, neuropsychological performance on tests of executive function was less impaired than that previously documented in boys with ADHD. If confirmed in a larger sample, these findings suggest that girls with ADHD may be less vulnerable to executive function deficits than boys.
Harvard Review of Psychiatry | 1998
Daniel A. Geller; Joseph Biederman; Janice Jones; Stephanie Shapiro; Suzanne Schwartz; Kenneth S. Park
&NA; Obsessive‐compulsive disorder (OCD) is a common psychiatric illness that occurs across the entire life span. Although most research on OCD pertains to adults, studies of the disorder in children and adolescents have burgeoned over the last decade. A review of this literature suggests that OCD has a bimodal incidence pattern, with one peak of onset at approximately 10 years of age and another during adulthood, and that the juvenile and adult forms are equally prevalent. Important similarities and differences between the juvenile‐ and adult‐onset forms of OCD can be seen: both show the same clinical phenotype, diagnostic nosology, and dose responsivity, but the early‐onset disorder differs in being clearly male preponderant, more highly familial, and associated with a distinct pattern of comorbid psychopathology, including disruptive behavior and specific developmental disorders. These findings have implications both for clinical management and for future research, which could consider age of onset as an important factor in studies of all OCD patients.
American Journal on Addictions | 1997
Sharon Milberger; Joseph Biederman; Stephen V. Faraone; Lisa Chen; Janice Jones
The authors investigated the relationship between attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and cigarette smoking in siblings of ADHD and non-ADHD probands. They conducted a 4-year follow-up of siblings from ADHD and control-group families. In the siblings of ADHD probands, ADHD was associated with higher rates and earlier onset of cigarette smoking. There was also a significant positive association between cigarette smoking and conduct disorder, major depression, and drug abuse in the siblings, even after adjusting for confounding variables. Moreover, smoking was found to be familial among ADHD families but not control-group families. Our findings indicate that ADHD is a risk factor for early initiation of cigarette smoking in the high-risk siblings of ADHD probands.
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 1998
Deborah O'donnell; Joseph Biederman; Janice Jones; Timothy E. Wilens; Sharon Milberger; Eric Mick; Stephen V. Faraone
OBJECTIVE To evaluate parent-child agreement on psychoactive substance use disorder (PSUD) reporting among children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and to test whether agreement level could be predicted from measures of parent and child psychopathology and substance use severity. METHOD The authors examined 348 pairs of child and parent assessments in a sample of 108 ADHD and 68 normal control probands and their 172 siblings aged 12 and older. RESULTS PSUD rates were higher when the child was the reporter than when the parent was. Agreement between parent and child reports was strongest for cigarette smoking, alcohol dependence, and any PSUD. Although parental reports were frequently endorsed by the childs report, the reverse was rarely true. Predictors of parental awareness of the childs PSUD included impaired social functioning, younger age of the child, presence of multiple substance use disorders in the child, and comorbid bipolar disorder. CONCLUSIONS PSUD rates vary by informant and are higher when the child is the reporter. Because severity of PSUD and multiple substance use were the strongest predictors of parental awareness, more efforts are needed to identify the more covert and milder cases of PSUD that may not reach clinical attention.
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey | 1997
Sharon Milberger; Joseph Biederman; Stephen V. Faraone; Lisa Chen; Janice Jones
OBJECTIVE This study investigated the role of maternal smoking during pregnancy in the etiology of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). METHOD Subjects were 6-17-year-old boys with DSM-III-R ADHD (N = 140) and normal comparison subjects (N = 120) and their first-degree biological relatives. Information on maternal smoking was obtained from mothers in a standardized manner by raters who were blind to the probands clinical status. RESULTS Twenty-two percent of the ADHD children had a maternal history of smoking during pregnancy, compared with 8% of the normal subjects. This positive association remained significant after adjustment for socioeconomic status, parental IQ, and parental ADHD status. Significant differences in IQ were found between those children whose mothers smoked during pregnancy and those whose mothers did not smoke (mean IQ = 104.9, SD = 12.3, and mean = 115.4, SD = 12.2, respectively). CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that maternal smoking during pregnancy is a risk factor for ADHD. If confirmed, these findings will stress the importance of programs aimed at smoking prevention in nonsmoking women and smoking cessation in smoking women of childbearing age.
American Journal of Psychiatry | 1996
Sharon Milberger; Joseph Biederman; Stephen V. Faraone; Lisa Chen; Janice Jones
American Journal of Psychiatry | 1998
Thomas J. Spencer; Joseph Biederman; Timothy E. Wilens; Jeffry Prince; Mary Hatch; Janice Jones; Margaret Harding; Stephen V. Faraone; Larry J. Seidman