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Retrospective Study of Fire Setting Among Boys in a Child Welfare Sample

NCJ Number
311376
Journal
Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice Volume: 18 Issue: 3 Dated: 2020 Pages: 256-273
Date Published
February 2020
Length
17 pages
Abstract

This study aimed to assess fire-setting behaviors within a child welfare sample. The youth were divided into four groups based on their fire-setting behavior (e.g., no incidents, one incident, multiple minor incidents, and multiple severe incidents). Groups were compared based on five factors: overt antisocial behavior, covert antisocial behavior, global adjustment, psychiatric history, and learning deficits. Fire setters displayed more delinquent behavior and had more extensive psychiatric histories than non-fire-setting youth. Further, the youth with multiple serious incidents of fire-setting behavior displayed more delinquent behavior and had more extensive psychiatric histories than any of the fire-setting groups. These findings clearly suggest that fire setters, as a group, are not homogeneous with respect to antisocial behavior or psychiatric impairment and that gravity of fire setting increased as a function of greater psychopathology and greater delinquency when compared to their peers.

(Publisher abstract provided.)

Date Published: February 1, 2020