Volume 45, Issue 9 , Pages 1077-1084, September 2006
Fire Interest and Antisociality as Risk Factors in the Severity and Persistence of Juvenile Firesetting
ABSTRACT
Objective
In the DSM-IV-TR, firesetting is included as a criterion for the diagnoses of conduct disorder and pyromania. The link between firesetting and antisocial behavior is well established in the empirical literature. Although theoretical models of firesetting often include fire interest as a putative risk factor, there is little research on the role of fire interest in firesetting or on the construct of pyromania.
Method
The present study evaluated a sample of children and adolescents referred to an outpatient specialty program for juvenile firesetters with firesetting as the primary presenting problem. By assessing fire interest and antisocial behavior concurrently, the contribution of fire interest to firesetting after controlling for the role of conduct problems was evaluated.
Results
Results revealed that fire interest and antisocial behavior were significantly and positively correlated. Moreover, variations in fire interest added to the prediction of firesetting severity at assessment and firesetting recidivism at 18-month follow-up above and beyond what was predicted by antisociality alone.
Conclusions
These findings have implications for an empirically derived taxonomy of pathological firesetting.
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This study was supported by grants from the Ontario Fire Marshal's Office, the Fire Marshal's Public Fire Safety Council, and the Toronto Fire Services. The authors thank Dr. Mark Hanson and Susan Dickens for their help with TAPP-C.Information about TAPP-C assessment instruments can be obtained at www.tappc.net.
PII: S0890-8567(09)61782-2
doi:10.1097/01.chi.0000227881.50404.ca
© 2006 The American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 45, Issue 9 , Pages 1077-1084, September 2006
