Irritability
Cross-source consensus on Irritability from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Other
Other
Highlighted claims
- Irritability is defined as increased proneness to anger compared with developmental peers, with recurrent disproportionate temper outbursts. — Understanding tonic and phasic irritability in developmental psychopathology among help-seeking children and adolescents in Switzerland: Protocol for the longitudinal multimodal UTOPICA study
- Irritability is a common reason children and adolescents are referred to mental health services. — Understanding tonic and phasic irritability in developmental psychopathology among help-seeking children and adolescents in Switzerland: Protocol for the longitudinal multimodal UTOPICA study
- Broad definitions of irritability have prevalence estimates of 20-30%, while severe chronic forms are estimated at 1-3%. — Understanding tonic and phasic irritability in developmental psychopathology among help-seeking children and adolescents in Switzerland: Protocol for the longitudinal multimodal UTOPICA study
- Childhood irritability is associated with later educational, health, delinquency, suicidality, depression, anxiety, and conduct-problem outcomes. — Understanding tonic and phasic irritability in developmental psychopathology among help-seeking children and adolescents in Switzerland: Protocol for the longitudinal multimodal UTOPICA study
- Irritability crosses both externalising and internalising psychopathology dimensions. — Understanding tonic and phasic irritability in developmental psychopathology among help-seeking children and adolescents in Switzerland: Protocol for the longitudinal multimodal UTOPICA study