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It's been long understood that children with attention issues are at higher odds for psychosis and schizophrenia later in development New research suggests attention does play a role in linking certain genetics to later psychiatric issues A better understanding of these childhood precursors to mental health issues could lead to better prevention, researchers say TUESDAY, Oct. 29, 2024 (HealthDay News) -- Most kids with attention issues won't go on to develop serious psychiatric conditions like psychosis or schizophrenia. However, a new study finds poor attention spans in childhood, plus certain genes, could play a role in raising the risk for these conditions.

Of course, much more research is needed to pinpoint precursors to psychotic symptoms in a person's teens or 20s, said a team from the University of California, Los Angeles. Even if children have certain risk factors, that's still not a guarantee of psychiatric illness in adulthood, they stressed. “If you have this strong liability based on your genetics and early attentional span, we don't know what the longer-term trajectories are and who are the people who are going to be more resilient to their underlying risk,” explained study lead author .



“That's going to be really important to look at when those [better] data become available," said Bearden, a professor at the UCLA Health Semel Institute and the UCLA Health Brain Research Institute. Her team published its findings Oct. 28 in the journal .

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