
@article{ref1,
title="Looking forward in records of youth abused as infants: risks for homicidal, violent, and delinquent offenses",
journal="Psychological reports",
year="2009",
author="Zagar, Robert John and Busch, K. G. and Grove, William M. and Hughes, John R. and Arbit, J.",
volume="104",
number="1",
pages="47-75",
abstract="To study risks for abuse and later homicidal behavior, 192 abused infants (M age = 3.12 yr., SD = 1.48; 82 girls, 110 boys) and 192 controls were matched on demographics and examined; data discriminating abused and later homicidal cases were analyzed with Shao's bootstrapped logistic regression. Predictors of Abused status were injury, burn, poisoning, fetal substance exposure (OR = 2.47), later parental or youth court contacts (OR = 1.86e+12), and parental alcohol abuse (OR = .54; AUC = .99; 95% CI = .96-.99). Youth tracked through records 12 years (to M age = 12.17 yr., SD = 1.89) were classified into Abused Later Homicidal (11%, n = 21), Abused Later Violent (14%, n = 27), Abused Later Delinquent (31%, n = 60), Abused Later Nondelinquent (n = 44), and Control groups (n = 192). Data were analyzed similarly. When the Abused Later Homicidal was contrasted with the Control group, predictors of homicide were three or more home/school moves (OR = .78), illnesses (OR = .90), and later court contacts (OR = 1.75e+07; AUC = .99; 95% CI = .90-.98). When the Abused Later Homicidal was compared with the Abused Later Nondelinquent group, predictors of homicide were poorer executive function (OR = 2.29) and later court contacts (OR = 7.78e+06; AUC = .94; 95% CI = .90-.98).<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0033-2941",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}