Adolescent Family Adversity and Mental Health Problems: The Role of Adaptive Self-regulation Capacities. The TRAILS Study

被引:0
作者
Martin Paul Bakker
Johan Ormel
Frank C. Verhulst
Albertine J. Oldehinkel
机构
[1] University of Groningen,Interdisciplinary Center for Psychiatric Epidemiology & Groningen Graduate School Medical Sciences, University Medical Center Groningen
[2] Erasmus University Medical Center—Sophia Children’s Hospital Rotterdam,Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
来源
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2011年 / 39卷
关键词
Family adversity; Effortful control; Attentional flexibility; Adolescence; Mental health;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Adolescent family adversity is a considerable adaptive challenge in an increasingly turbulent developmental period. Using data from a prospective population cohort of 2230 Dutch adolescents, we tested risk-buffering interactions between adolescent family adversity and self-regulation capacities on mental health. We used two adaptive self-regulation capacities that could allow adolescents to manage relatively well with family adversity: (1) parent-reported effortful control, and (2) an attentional flexibility (in this case, set-shifting) task. Adolescent family adversity was associated with internalizing problems and externalizing problems. The risk-buffering effects of effortful control were found for externalizing problems but not for internalizing problems. There were no risk-buffering effects of attentional flexibility on both types of mental health problems. Effortful control is likely to benefit adolescents’ ability to channel their frustrations in adaptive ways in the presence of family adversity. Additionally, (attentional) set-shifting tasks might have a limited predictive value for risk-buffering research.
引用
收藏
页码:341 / 350
页数:9
相关论文
共 148 条
  • [1] Ackerman BP(1999)Family instability and the problem behaviors of children from economically disadvantaged families Developmental Psychology 35 258-268
  • [2] Kogos J(2002)Home sweet home(s): parental separations, residential moves and adjustment problems in low-income adolescent girls Developmental Psychology 38 792-805
  • [3] Youngstrom E(2001)Event history calendars and question list surveys: a direct comparison of interviewing methods Public Opinion Quarterly 65 45-74
  • [4] Schoff K(2003)Characteristics of resilient youth living in poverty: the role of self-regulatory processes Development and Psychopathology 15 139-162
  • [5] Izard C(2009)Self-regulation and its relation to adaptive functioning in low income youth The American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 79 19-30
  • [6] Adam EK(2007)Information processing profiles of internalizing and externalizing behavior problems: evidence from a population-based sample of preadolescents Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 48 185-193
  • [7] Chase-Lansdale PL(1996)The life history calender: a research and clinical assessment method for collecting retrospective event-history data International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research 6 101-114
  • [8] Belli RF(2006)The implications of emotion security theory for understanding and treating childhood psychopathology Development and Psychopathology 18 707-735
  • [9] Shay WL(1997)Reactive and effortful processes in the organization of temperament Development and Psychopathology 9 633-652
  • [10] Stafford FP(2002)Regulation, resiliency, and quality of social functioning Self and Identity 1 121-128