1. An Indirect Effects Model of the Association Between Poverty and Child Functioning: The Role of Children's Poverty-Related Stress
- Author
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Tali Raviv, Christine Reinhard, Brian Wolff, Catherine DeCarlo Santiago, Lindsey Einhorn, and Martha E. Wadsworth
- Subjects
Pregnancy ,Social Psychology ,Poverty ,Aggression ,Family income ,medicine.disease ,Child development ,Developmental psychology ,Substance abuse ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine ,Pshychiatric Mental Health ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,Socioeconomic status ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) - Abstract
The authors tested a theoretical model positing that poverty has an indirect effect on child and adolescent functioning through children's poverty-related stress. Path analyses with a multiethnic sample of 164 children aged 6 to 18 revealed that the stress associated with poverty, such as economic strain, family conflict, violence/trauma, and discrimination, is an important component of the experience of poverty for children. Poverty-related stress was associated with a wide range of correlates, including internalizing and externalizing syndromes, DSM-IV diagnostic symptoms, physical health, and deviant behavior such as pregnancy, legal problems, substance abuse, and school dropout. Most models fit equally well for adolescents and preadolescents, suggesting that poverty is stressful for children as young as 6. African American children's functioning was less strongly associated with poverty-related stress than was the functioning of Hispanic and Caucasian children. Implications of poverty-related stress a...
- Published
- 2008