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Journal Article

Citation

Lee MC, Huang N, Chen CY. Child Abuse Negl. 2020; 109: e104705.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.chiabu.2020.104705

PMID

32961426

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Childhood adversities (CAs) have been linked with unfavorable development; however, the chronic trajectories of multiple CAs and possible heterogeneous effects are understudied.
OBJECTIVES: This study examined the trajectories of multiple CAs and their associations with mental health outcomes in adolescence and investigated the buffering effect of parenting practices.
PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: We used population-representative data from the Taiwan Education Panel Survey (2005 and 2007, n = 10,416).
METHODS: This study was based on retrospectively self-reporting of six CAs, namely physical abuse, family economic hardship, parental problematic drinking, parental catastrophic health problems, parental divorce, and parental death, at three developmental periods: early childhood, middle childhood, and early adolescence. Group-based multitrajectory modeling and multiple regressions were used to identify distinct trajectories of multiple CAs and evaluate the association estimates.
RESULTS: A total of four trajectory groups were identified: increasing family economic hardship (12.3 %), chronic physical abuse (3.3 %), chronic parental problematic drinking (2.8 %), and low adversity (81.6 %). The chronic physical abuse group had the highest levels of depressive symptoms (β = 6.61, p <.001) and suicidal ideation (Adjusted Odds Ratio [AOR] = 2.67, p <.001), whereas the chronic parental problematic drinking group had the highest level of substance abuse (AOR = 4.59, p <.001). Positive parental practices buffered the harmful effects of increasing family economic hardship in late adolescence, particularly for depressive symptoms and substance abuse.
CONCLUSIONS: Adverse mental health outcomes varied among groups with distinct multiple CA trajectories. The provision of social services to train or support positive parenting practices in families experiencing economic hardship is a potentially valuable resilience strategy.


Language: en

Keywords

Adolescence; Adolescent; Adolescent Behavior; Adult; Adverse Childhood Experiences; Child; Child Abuse; Childhood adversity; Divorce; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Multiple group-based trajectories; Parenting; Parents; Positive parenting practice; Retrospective Studies; Socioeconomic Factors; Substance-Related Disorders; Suicidal Ideation; Surveys and Questionnaires; Taiwan; TEPS; Young Adult

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