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Adolescent mental health and family economic hardships : the roles of adverse childhood experiences and family conflict.

Catalogue Information
Field name Details
Nuova numerazione 83940
Collocazione UPS BIBL CENTR 39-B-921
Autore BARNHART, S.
Titolo Adolescent mental health and family economic hardships : the roles of adverse childhood experiences and family conflict. Parte componente di periodico
Descrizione fisica pp. 2294-2311.
Nota generale Estratto da: Journal of Youth and Adolescence 2022, 51, 12.
Riassunto Rising and economically disproportionate rates of adverse mental health outcomes among children and youth warrant research investigating the complex pathways stemming from socioeconomic status. While adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) have been considered a possible mechanism linking socioeconomic status (SES) and child and youth psychopathology in previous studies, less is understood about how family environments might condition these pathways. Using data from a longitudinal, multiple-wave study, the present study addresses this gap by examining the direct relationships between family economic status and youth internalizing and externalizing symptoms, if ACEs mediate these relationships, and if conflictual family environments moderate these direct and indirect relationships. The data were obtained from 5510 youth participants [mean age at baseline = 9.52 (SD = 0.50), 47.7% female, 2.1% Asian, 10.3% Black, 17.6% Hispanic, 9.8% Multiracial/Multiethnic, 60.2% White] and their caretakers from the baseline, 1-year, and 2-year follow up waves. Conditional process analysis assessed the direct, indirect, and moderated relationships in separate, equivalent models based on youth- versus caregiver-raters of ACEs and youth psychopathology to capture potential differences based on the rater. The results of both the youth- and caregiver-rated models indicated that lower family economic status directly predicted higher levels of externalizing symptoms, and ACEs indirectly accounted for higher levels of internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Additionally, family conflict moderated some, but not all, of these relationships. The study’s findings highlight that lower family economic status and ACEs, directly and indirectly, contribute to early adolescent psychopathology, and conflictual family environments can further intensify these relationships. Implementing empirically supported policies and interventions that target ACEs and family environments may disrupt deleterious pathways between SES and youth psychopathology.
Soggetto GENITORI-FIGLI.
ADOLESCENTI.
BENESSERE.
DOCENTI.
IDENTITÀ.
FAMIGLIA.
PSICOLOGIA.
CULTURA.
Ambito Psicologico
Statistico
Autore Secondario GARCIA, A. R.
KARCHER, N. R.
Titolo correlato Journal of Youth and Adolescence 2022, 51, 12.
Accesso online Accesso diretto all'articolo
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