Protective factors in the development of early child conduct problems

Family Relations
Ella Vanderbilt-AdrianceMelvin Wilson

Abstract

The present study utilized a resilience model to investigate child, family, and community protective factors in toddlerhood as they relate to low levels of conduct problems at age 5 in a sample of low income children at risk for early disruptive problem behavior. Child, family, and community factors were associated with lower levels of conduct problems at age 5. Child, family, and community protective factors also distinguished between children who remained below and above a clinical threshold for aggressive problems between age 2 and 5. Finally, each domain of protective factors made small but significant unique contributions to lower aggression at age 5. These results emphasize the importance of multivariate analysis of the ecology of development predicting child outcome, and suggest potential areas for intervention with children at high risk for conduct problems.

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Citations

Apr 30, 2015·Behavioral Sciences·Megan R HolmesStacey Steigerwald
Sep 3, 2016·Research in Developmental Disabilities·Sheila McDonaldSuzanne Tough
Feb 17, 2017·Journal of Youth and Adolescence·Jacqueline O Moses, Miguel T Villodas
Sep 23, 2018·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Katarzyna Sitnik-Warchulska, Bernadetta Izydorczyk
Jan 30, 2019·Frontiers in Psychiatry·Simon RichesHelen L Fisher

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