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Journal Article

Citation

Schiff M, McKay MM. Fam. Process 2003; 42(4): 517-529.

Affiliation

Hebrew University of Jerusalem, School of Social Work, Jerusalem, Israel. msschiff@mscc.huji.ac.il

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Family Process Institute, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

14979222

Abstract

The current study will examine behavioral difficulties among a sample of African American urban youth who were exposed to violence. Possible gender differences in disruptive behavioral difficulties, as well as possible associations between parental practices, family relationships, and youth disruptive behavioral difficulties are examined. A secondary data analysis from baseline data for 125 African American urban mothers and their children collected as part of a large-scale, urban, family-based, HIV prevention research study was analyzed. Findings reveal that externalizing behavioral problems in youth are associated with exposure to violence. Girls displayed significantly higher levels of externalizing behavioral difficulties than boys. Mothers' parenting practices and family relationships were associated with youths' externalizing behavior problems. Implications for interventions to reduce youths' exposure to violence and to develop gender sensitive interventions for youth and supportive interventions for their parents are discussed.


Language: en

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