12 results on '"Godwin, Jennifer W."'
Search Results
2. Child and Adolescent Psychopathology and Subsequent Harmful Behaviors Associated with Premature Mortality: A Selective Review and Future Directions
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Yu, Rachelle A., Goulter, Natalie, Godwin, Jennifer W., and McMahon, Robert J.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Intergenerational Effects of a Family Cash Transfer on the Home Environment
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Copeland, William E., Tong, Guangyu, Shanahan, Lilly, Rothenberg, W. Andrew, Lansford, Jennifer E., Godwin, Jennifer W., Rybińska, Anna, Odgers, Candice L., and Dodge, Kenneth A.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Taking John Schulenberg's "long view" on successful transitions to adulthood: Associations with adult substance use.
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Rothenberg, W. Andrew, Godwin, Jennifer W., Copeland, William E., Shanahan, Lilly, Gaydosh, Lauren, Gutin, Iliya, and Coltrane, Asha
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YOUNG adults , *TRANSITION to adulthood , *HOME ownership , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *HOME environment - Abstract
Can positive transitions into young adulthood at age 25 prevent problematic substance use at age 31, even in the context of childhood adverse family environments, conduct problems, and adolescent substance use? We lean on John Schulenberg's developmental framework to examine this question, focusing on the potential young adult milestones of high school and college graduation, employment, residential independence, romantic partnership, and parenthood. Data came from a prospective‐longitudinal multi‐method study with N = 1199 participants who were first assessed at age 5 years old and followed to age 31. An accumulation of positive transitions in young adulthood (age 25) was associated with lower likelihood of age 31 problematic cannabis use. The protective effect for problematic cannabis use remained even when adjusting for childhood adverse family environments and was primarily driven by successful college graduation and/or home ownership. The accumulation of positive transitions protected individuals at modest to somewhat elevated risk due to childhood adverse family environments from experiencing age 31 cannabis use problems. However, for other individuals with very high numbers of conduct problems, or with high levels of adolescent substance use, the protective effects of accumulated positive transitions to young adulthood were less strong or nonexistent. Moreover, individuals who completed college or obtained full‐time employment by 25 were more likely to report problematic age 31 alcohol use. These findings highlight the central tenets of John Schulenberg's developmental framework, including the examination of ontogenetic continuity and discontinuity, the interplay of developmentally distal and proximal effects, and the identification of developmental protective factors that may sway people toward or away from substance use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. The Fast Track intervention’s impact on behaviors of despair in adolescence and young adulthood
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Conduct Problems Prevention Research Group and Godwin, Jennifer W.
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- 2020
6. Intergenerational Effects of the Fast Track Intervention on Next-Generation Child Outcomes: A Preregistered Randomized Clinical Trial.
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Rothenberg, W. Andrew, Lansford, Jennifer E., Godwin, Jennifer W., Dodge, Kenneth A., Copeland, William E., Odgers, Candice L., McMahon, Robert J., and Rybinska, Anna
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MEDICAL care use ,MENTAL health services ,CHILD health services ,CLINICAL trials ,CHILDREN of immigrants ,OUTPATIENT medical care - Abstract
The authors sought to determine whether the Fast Track mental health intervention delivered to individuals in childhood decreased mental health problems and the need for health services among the children of these individuals. The authors examined whether Fast Track assignment in one generation of children (generation 2; G2) from grades 1 through 10 reduced parent-reported mental health problems and health services use in these children's children (generation 3; G3) 18 years later relative to a control group. The Fast Track intervention blended parent behavior-management training, child social-cognitive skills tutoring, home visits, and classroom social-ecology changes across grades 1–10 to ameliorate emerging conduct problems among the G2 children. For this study, 1,057 G3 children of Fast Track participants (N=581 intervention group, N=476 control group) were evaluated. G3 children of G2 parents who were randomized to the Fast Track intervention group used fewer general inpatient services and fewer inpatient or outpatient mental health services compared with G3 children of G2 parents randomized to the control group. Some of these effects were mediated: randomization to Fast Track predicted fewer internalizing problems and less use of corporal punishment among G2 adults at age 25, which subsequently predicted less general inpatient service use and outpatient mental health service use among the G3 children by the time the G2 parents were 34 years old. There were no significant differences between G3 children from these two groups on the use of other health services or on mental health measures. Fast Track was associated with lower use of general inpatient services and inpatient and outpatient mental health services intergenerationally, but effects on parent-reported mental health of the children were not apparent across generations. Investing in interventions for the mental health of children could reduce service use burdens across generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
7. Intergenerational Effects of a Family Cash Transfer on the Home Environment
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Copeland, William E., primary, Tong, Guangyu, additional, Shanahan, Lilly, additional, Rothenberg, W. Andrew, additional, Lansford, Jennifer E., additional, Godwin, Jennifer W., additional, Rybińska, Anna, additional, Odgers, Candice L., additional, and Dodge, Kenneth A., additional
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- 2023
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8. Intergenerational effects of the Fast Track intervention on the home environment: A randomized control trial.
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Rothenberg, William Andrew, Lansford, Jennifer E., Godwin, Jennifer W., Dodge, Kenneth A., Copeland, William E., Odgers, Candice L., McMahon, Robert J., and Goulter, Natalie
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SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,HOME environment ,PARENT attitudes ,INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,ALCOHOL-induced disorders ,FOOD security ,CHILD behavior ,REGRESSION analysis ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,SURVEYS ,INTIMATE partner violence ,EARLY intervention (Education) ,MENTAL depression ,PUNISHMENT ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling - Abstract
Background: Maladaptive family environments harm child development and are passed across generations. Childhood interventions may break this intergenerational cycle by improving the family environments children form as adults. The present study investigates this hypothesis by examining follow‐up data collected 18 years after the end of the childhood Fast Track intervention designed to prevent externalizing problems. Methods: We examined whether Fast Track assignment from grades 1 to 10 prevented the emergence of maladaptive family environments at age 34. A total of 400 (n = 206 in intervention condition, n = 194 controls) Fast Track participants who were parents at age 34 were surveyed about 11 aspects of their current family environment. The hypotheses and analytic plan were preregistered at https://osf.io/dz9t5 and the Fast Track trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov (NCT01653535). Results: Multiple group linear regression models revealed that mothers who participated in the Fast Track intervention as children had lower depression symptoms, alcohol problems, drug problems, corporal punishment use, and food insecurity compared to control group mothers. All effects were modest in magnitude. However, for these same mothers, the Fast Track intervention had no effect on cannabis problems, experiences of romantic partner violence, or maternal use of physical aggression or warmth with their children. Additionally, mothers in the Fast Track intervention group reported higher levels of family chaos than those in the control group, but this effect may be a byproduct of the higher number of children per household in the intervention group. No intervention effects were found for fathers who participated in the Fast Track intervention as children. Conclusions: Childhood assignment to Fast Track has some beneficial effects for girls, but not boys, on the family environments these individuals formed as adults 18 years later. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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9. Civic Socialization in Public and Fundamentalist Schools
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Godwin, R. Kenneth, Godwin, Jennifer W., and Martinez-Ebers, Valerie
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- 2004
10. The Fast Track intervention's impact on behaviors of despair in adolescence and young adulthood.
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Godwin, Jennifer W.
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ADULTS , *ATTEMPTED suicide , *YOUNG adults , *ADOLESCENCE , *AT-risk behavior - Abstract
How to mitigate the dramatic increase in the number of self-inflicted deaths from suicide, alcohol-related liver disease, and drug overdose among young adults has become a critical public health question. A promising area of study looks at interventions designed to address risk factors for the behaviors that precede these --often denoted--"deaths of despair." This paper examines whether a childhood intervention can have persistent positive effects by reducing adolescent and young adulthood (age 25) behaviors that precede these deaths, including suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, hazardous drinking, and opioid use. These analyses test the impact and mechanisms of action of Fast Track (FT), a comprehensive childhood intervention designed to decrease aggression and delinquency in at-risk kindergarteners. We find that random assignment to FT significantly decreases the probability of exhibiting any behavior of despair in adolescence and young adulthood. In addition, the intervention decreases the probability of suicidal ideation and hazardous drinking in adolescence and young adulthood as well as opioid use in young adulthood. Additional analyses indicate that FT's improvements to children's interpersonal (e.g., prosocial behavior, authority acceptance), intrapersonal (e.g., emotional recognition and regulation, social problem solving), and academic skills in elementary and middle school partially mediate the intervention effect on adolescent and young adult behaviors of despair and self-destruction. FT's improvements to interpersonal skills emerge as the strongest indirect pathway to reduce these harmful behaviors. This study provides evidence that childhood interventions designed to improve these skills can decrease the behaviors associated with premature mortality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Neighborhood Danger, Parental Monitoring, Harsh Parenting, and Child Aggression in Nine Countries
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Psychology, Skinner, Ann T., Bacchini, Dario, Lansford, Jennifer E., Godwin, Jennifer W., Sorbring, Emma, Tapanya, Sombat, Tirado, Liliana Maria Uribe, Zelli, Arnaldo, Alampay, Liane Peña, Al-Hassan, Suha M., Bombi, Anna Silvia, Bornstein, Marc H., Chang, Lei, Deater-Deckard, Kirby, Di Giunta, Laura, Dodge, Kenneth A., Malone, Patrick S., Miranda, Maria Concetta, Oburu, Paul, Pastorelli, Concetta, Psychology, Skinner, Ann T., Bacchini, Dario, Lansford, Jennifer E., Godwin, Jennifer W., Sorbring, Emma, Tapanya, Sombat, Tirado, Liliana Maria Uribe, Zelli, Arnaldo, Alampay, Liane Peña, Al-Hassan, Suha M., Bombi, Anna Silvia, Bornstein, Marc H., Chang, Lei, Deater-Deckard, Kirby, Di Giunta, Laura, Dodge, Kenneth A., Malone, Patrick S., Miranda, Maria Concetta, Oburu, Paul, and Pastorelli, Concetta
- Abstract
Exposure to neighborhood danger during childhood has negative effects that permeate multiple dimensions of childhood. The current study examined whether mothers’, fathers’, and children’s perceptions of neighborhood danger are related to child aggression, whether parental monitoring moderates this relation, and whether harsh parenting mediates this relation. Interviews were conducted with a sample of 1293 children (age M = 10.68, SD = 0.66; 51% girls) and their mothers (n = 1282) and fathers (n = 1075) in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States). Perceptions of greater neighborhood danger were associated with more child aggression in all nine countries according to mothers’ and fathers’ reports and in five of the nine countries according to children’s reports. Parental monitoring did not moderate the relation between perception of neighborhood danger and child aggression. The mediating role of harsh parenting was inconsistent across countries and reporters. Implications for further research are discussed, and include examination of more specific aspects of parental monitoring as well as more objective measures of neighborhood danger.
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- 2014
12. Neighborhood Danger, Parental Monitoring, Harsh Parenting, and Child Aggression in Nine Countries.
- Author
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Skinner, Ann T., Bacchini, Dario, Lansford, Jennifer E., Godwin, Jennifer W., Sorbring, Emma, Tapanya, Sombat, Uribe Tirado, Liliana Maria, Zelli, Arnaldo, Peña Alampay, Liane, Al-Hassan, Suha M., Silvia Bombi, Anna, Bornstein, Marc H., Lei Chang, Deater-Deckard, Kirby, Di Giunta, Laura, Dodge, Kenneth A., Malone, Patrick S., Miranda, Maria Concetta, Oburu, Paul, and Pastorelli, Concetta
- Subjects
VIOLENCE in the community ,VIOLENT children ,AGGRESSION (Psychology) in children ,PARENTING ,PARENT-child relationships - Abstract
Exposure to neighborhood danger during childhood has negative effects that permeate multiple dimensions of childhood. The current study examined whether mothers', fathers', and children's perceptions of neighborhood danger are related to child aggression, whether parental monitoring moderates this relation, and whether harsh parenting mediates this relation. Interviews were conducted with a sample of 1293 children (age M = 10.68, SD = 0.66; 51% girls) and their mothers (n = 1282) and fathers (n = 1075) in nine countries (China, Colombia, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, the Philippines, Sweden, Thailand, and the United States). Perceptions of greater neighborhood danger were associated with more child aggression in all nine countries according to mothers' and fathers' reports and in five of the nine countries according to children's reports. Parental monitoring did not moderate the relation between perception of neighborhood danger and child aggression. The mediating role of harsh parenting was inconsistent across countries and reporters. Implications for further research are discussed, and include examination of more specific aspects of parental monitoring as well as more objective measures of neighborhood danger. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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