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Modeling risks: effects of area deprivation, family socio-economic disadvantage and adverse life events on young children’s psychopathology

Modeling risks: effects of area deprivation, family socio-economic disadvantage and adverse life events on young children’s psychopathology
Modeling risks: effects of area deprivation, family socio-economic disadvantage and adverse life events on young children’s psychopathology
Background: The effects of contextual risk on young children’s behavior are not appropriately modeled.

Aims: To model the effects of area and family contextual risk on young children’s psychopathology.

Method: The final study sample consisted of 4,618 Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) children, who were 3 years old, clustered in lower layer super output areas in nine strata in the UK. Contextual risk was measured by socio-economic disadvantage (SED) at both area and family level, and by distal and proximal adverse life events at family level. Multivariate response multilevel models that allowed for correlated residuals at both individual and area level, and univariate multilevel models estimated the effect of contextual risk on specific and broad psychopathology measured by the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire.

Results: The area SED/broad psychopathology association remained significant after family SED was controlled, but not after maternal qualifications and family adverse life events were added to the model. Adverse life events predicted psychopathology in all models. Family SED did not predict emotional symptoms or hyperactivity after child characteristics were added to the model with the family-level controls.

Conclusions: Area-level SED predicts child psychopathology via family characteristics; family-level SED predicts psychopathology largely by its impact on development; and adverse life events predict psychopathology independently of earlier adversity, SED and child characteristics, as well as maternal psychopathology, parenting and education.
child psychopathology, hierarchical data, multilevel models, multivariate response multilevel models, socio-economic disadvantage
0933-7954
611-619
Flouri, Eirini
551bd46e-a001-4f0a-a6cc-8e4d0a69442b
Mavroveli, Stella
21044372-6771-420a-bff4-a7e4666dc662
Tzavidis, Nikos
431ec55d-c147-466d-9c65-0f377b0c1f6a
Flouri, Eirini
551bd46e-a001-4f0a-a6cc-8e4d0a69442b
Mavroveli, Stella
21044372-6771-420a-bff4-a7e4666dc662
Tzavidis, Nikos
431ec55d-c147-466d-9c65-0f377b0c1f6a

Flouri, Eirini, Mavroveli, Stella and Tzavidis, Nikos (2010) Modeling risks: effects of area deprivation, family socio-economic disadvantage and adverse life events on young children’s psychopathology. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 45 (6), 611-619. (doi:10.1007/s00127-009-0101-x). (PMID:19629362)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: The effects of contextual risk on young children’s behavior are not appropriately modeled.

Aims: To model the effects of area and family contextual risk on young children’s psychopathology.

Method: The final study sample consisted of 4,618 Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) children, who were 3 years old, clustered in lower layer super output areas in nine strata in the UK. Contextual risk was measured by socio-economic disadvantage (SED) at both area and family level, and by distal and proximal adverse life events at family level. Multivariate response multilevel models that allowed for correlated residuals at both individual and area level, and univariate multilevel models estimated the effect of contextual risk on specific and broad psychopathology measured by the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire.

Results: The area SED/broad psychopathology association remained significant after family SED was controlled, but not after maternal qualifications and family adverse life events were added to the model. Adverse life events predicted psychopathology in all models. Family SED did not predict emotional symptoms or hyperactivity after child characteristics were added to the model with the family-level controls.

Conclusions: Area-level SED predicts child psychopathology via family characteristics; family-level SED predicts psychopathology largely by its impact on development; and adverse life events predict psychopathology independently of earlier adversity, SED and child characteristics, as well as maternal psychopathology, parenting and education.

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More information

Published date: June 2010
Keywords: child psychopathology, hierarchical data, multilevel models, multivariate response multilevel models, socio-economic disadvantage

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 181897
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/181897
ISSN: 0933-7954
PURE UUID: ffcb8306-9c48-4520-b550-770a22a433b7
ORCID for Nikos Tzavidis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8413-8095

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Date deposited: 26 Apr 2011 08:38
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:11

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Contributors

Author: Eirini Flouri
Author: Stella Mavroveli
Author: Nikos Tzavidis ORCID iD

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