Early Child Abuse and the Effects of Subsequent Witnessed Violence: Results from a National High Risk Sample of Adolescents

Early child abuse likely changes the response to later witnessed community violence, but this interaction is not well understood. This study examined whether early physical, emotional and sexual abuse modify the relationship between adolescent witnessed community violence and functioning. Drawing on...

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Veröffentlicht in:Child & adolescent social work journal 2021-02, Vol.38 (1), p.91-99
Hauptverfasser: Elsaesser, Caitlin, Katz, Colleen Cary, Feely, Megan, Tredinnick, Lorin
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container_title Child & adolescent social work journal
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creator Elsaesser, Caitlin
Katz, Colleen Cary
Feely, Megan
Tredinnick, Lorin
description Early child abuse likely changes the response to later witnessed community violence, but this interaction is not well understood. This study examined whether early physical, emotional and sexual abuse modify the relationship between adolescent witnessed community violence and functioning. Drawing on stress–diathesis theory, we examined the relevance of two competing models—the stress amplification and stress inoculation model—in a large national high risk sample (N = 874) in the United States. Consistent with stress amplification, results derived from multiple linear regressions suggested that early physical and sexual abuse strengthened the association of adolescent witnessed violence with social competency. In contrast, in one case a stress-inoculation effect was observed, such that youth who reported early sexual abuse experienced fewer internalizing symptoms in response to witnessed violence compared to those without early abuse. Implications of findings are addressed, including the importance of screening for all forms of early abuse (physical, emotional and sexual) so service provision can be effectively timed and tailored.
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subjects Abused children
Adolescents
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Child Abuse
Child abuse & neglect
Child sexual abuse
Children
Clinical Psychology
Emotional abuse
High risk
Internalization
Medical screening
Personality and Social Psychology
Psychology
Sex crimes
Sexual abuse
Social skills
Sociology
Stress
Teenagers
Tests
Violence
title Early Child Abuse and the Effects of Subsequent Witnessed Violence: Results from a National High Risk Sample of Adolescents
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