The Borneo Post

Tot test spots future crooks, druggies, deadbeat dads – Study

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TESTING for intelligen­ce, motor skills and troubled behaviour at age three showed which tots were likely to wind up behind bars or as deadbeat dads later in life, a long-term study reported on Monday.

The results should make it possible to deliver help to young kids at risk before they wind up with a rap sheet or a drug addiction, said the study, which measured the social cost of early childhood privation.

The findings published in the journal Nature Human Behaviour may also apply to other wealthy societies with comparable income inequaliti­es and social safety nets.

“Most expenses from social problems are concentrat­ed in a small segment of the population,” said Avshalom Caspi, lead author of the study and a professor of psychiatry and neuroscien­ce at Duke University in the United States.

“We can predict this quite well, beginning at age three, by assessing a child’s history of disadvanta­ge, and particular­ly ‘ brain health’,” he noted in a statement.

In a long-term experiment involving 1,000 people, the first of a dozen evaluation­s from age three to 38 measured IQ, language and motor skills, and rated the children for their tolerance of frustratio­n, as well as restlessne­ss and impulsive behaviour.

The study revealed other concrete measures of the cost to society generated by a minority born into difficult circumstan­ces.

The troubled 20 per cent accounted for three quarters of fatherless child-rearing and drug prescripti­ons, as well as more than half of hospital nights and cigarettes smoked.

This group also carried 40 per cent of their age cohort’s obese weight, and filed 36 per cent of personal-injury insurance claims.

The real-life laboratory giving rise to these numbers is a longterm evaluation that has tracked 1,000 New Zealanders from cradle to the cusp of middle age.

A fifth of 38-year- olds in New Zealand account for four- fifths of criminal conviction­s and twothirds of welfare dependence in their age group, the study found.

All the participan­ts in the so- called Dunedin Study - - representi­ng the full socioecono­mic spectrum of New Zealand society – were born in

Most expenses from social problems are concentrat­ed in a small segment of the population. We can predict this quite well, beginning at age three, by assessing a child’s history of disadvanta­ge, and particular­ly ‘brain health’. Avshalom Caspi, lead author of the study and a professor of psychiatry and neuroscien­ce

the city of that name between April 1972 and March 1973.

Follow-up tests and evaluation­s were performed at two-year intervals up to age 15, and at three- or four-year intervals after that.

The outcomes were matched against comprehens­ive government and health records.

“We know every location they’ve lived, every name they’ve used,” said Terrie Moffitt, a professor at Duke who also took part in the study.

“The digitalisa­tion of people’s lives allows us to quantify precisely how much a person costs society,” he added, noting that many experts were sceptical that the Dunedin data could be accurately linked up with public records.

The Big Brother overtones of the study should not be used to single out the “costly” members of society for ridicule or blame, the authors cautioned.

Being able to identify children struggling early in life should instead be seen as an opportunit­y to intervene and “change their trajectori­es – for everyone’s benefits,” Moffitt said.

The researcher­s argued that New Zealand is a good “laboratory” because it has income gaps similar to those in the United States and Britain, and spends a comparable amount on health care. — AFP

 ??  ?? In a long-term experiment involving 1,000 people, the first of a dozen evaluation­s from age three to 38 measured IQ, language and motor skills, and rated the children for their tolerance of frustratio­n, as well as restlessne­ss and impulsive behaviour....
In a long-term experiment involving 1,000 people, the first of a dozen evaluation­s from age three to 38 measured IQ, language and motor skills, and rated the children for their tolerance of frustratio­n, as well as restlessne­ss and impulsive behaviour....

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