Longitudinal Patterns of Adversity From Childhood to Adolescence: Examining Associations With Mental Health Through Emerging Adulthood Using a Random-Intercept Latent Transition Analysis

Childhood adversity can have detrimental impacts on life course mental and physical health. Timing, nature, severity, and chronicity of adversity are thought to explain much of the variability in health and developmental outcomes among exposed individuals. The current study seeks to characterize het...

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Veröffentlicht in:Developmental psychology 2024-05, Vol.60 (5), p.840-857
Hauptverfasser: Raghunathan, Radhika S., Johnson, Sara B., Voegtline, Kristin M., Sosnowski, David W., Kuehn, Molly, Ialongo, Nicholas S., Musci, Rashelle J.
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container_end_page 857
container_issue 5
container_start_page 840
container_title Developmental psychology
container_volume 60
creator Raghunathan, Radhika S.
Johnson, Sara B.
Voegtline, Kristin M.
Sosnowski, David W.
Kuehn, Molly
Ialongo, Nicholas S.
Musci, Rashelle J.
description Childhood adversity can have detrimental impacts on life course mental and physical health. Timing, nature, severity, and chronicity of adversity are thought to explain much of the variability in health and developmental outcomes among exposed individuals. The current study seeks to characterize heterogeneity in adverse experiences over time at the individual, family, and neighborhood domains in a cohort of predominantly Black children (85% Black and 15% White, 46.2% girls, 67.2% free/reduced lunch in first grade), and to examine associations with mental health from sixth grade to age 26. Participants were part of a randomized universal preventive interventions trial in first grade with prospective follow-up through early adulthood. Separate models characterized heterogeneity in adversity in elementary, middle, and high schools. Changes in adversity over time and relationships with mental health (anxiety, depression, suicidal behaviors) were investigated using a random-intercept latent transition analysis (RI-LTA). We identified three-class solutions in early childhood, middle school, and high school. Generally, both a higher and a lower poly-adversity class were observed at each time point, with varying nature of adversity characterized by the third class. RI-LTA indicated prevalent within-individual changes in adverse exposure over time and differential associations with mental health and suicidal behaviors. Results suggest that treating adverse exposures as a static construct may limit the ability to characterize salient variation over time. Identifying complexity in adverse experiences and their relation to health and well-being is key for developing and implementing effective prevention and early intervention efforts to mitigate negative effects through the life course. Public Significance StatementChildren are exposed to changing forms of adversity across development with differential impacts on mental health. Focusing on repeated, adaptive, coordinated, and multilevel preventive mental health efforts will be crucial to support the well-being of children and adolescents throughout the life course.
doi_str_mv 10.1037/dev0001717
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subjects Adolescence
Adolescent
Adolescent girls
Adult
Adults
Adverse
Adverse Childhood Experiences - statistics & numerical data
Adversity
Anxiety
Associations
Black people
Child
Childhood
Depression
Early intervention
Experiences (Events)
Exposure
Female
Grade 1
Grade 6
Health behavior
Health status
High Schools
Human
Humans
Intermediate Grades
Latent Class Analysis
Life course
Life Span
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Mental Health
Middle schools
Neighborhoods
Physical Health
Prevention programs
Preventive Mental Health Services
Secondary schools
Suicidal Behavior
Suicidal Ideation
Suicide
Young Adult
Young Children
title Longitudinal Patterns of Adversity From Childhood to Adolescence: Examining Associations With Mental Health Through Emerging Adulthood Using a Random-Intercept Latent Transition Analysis
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