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Exposure to Trauma and Violence

Exposure to Community Violence and the Trajectory of Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms in a Sample of Low-Income Urban Youth

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Pages 421-435 | Published online: 24 May 2016
 

Abstract

This study examined trajectories of psychopathology in a sample of low-income urban youth and tested exposure to community violence as a predictor of these trajectories. Self-report and parent-report survey measures of psychological problems and exposure to community violence were collected annually over 3 years from a sample of 364 fifth- to ninth-grade low-income urban youth (64% female; 95% youth of color). Linear growth models showed that youth experienced declines in both internalizing and externalizing symptoms across adolescence. Exposure to community violence was more strongly associated with externalizing symptoms than with internalizing symptoms but predicted declines in both types of symptoms. Results also indicated that youth reported more internalizing and externalizing symptoms than their parents reported for them. Exposure to community violence may explain unique trajectories of mental health problems among low-income urban youth. In addition, youth efforts to adopt a tough façade in the face of community violence could lead to higher rates of externalizing problems relative to internalizing problems, whereas desensitization processes may better explain reductions in both types of symptoms over time. Finally, youth report may be more valid than parent report in the context of urban poverty.

FUNDING

This research was supported by grants from the William T. Grant Foundation and the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression

Notes

1 Each model was also run with Time 3 as intercept to test whether ECV predicted differences at the end of the study. No significant differences remained for internalizing problems, whereas all models for youth-reported externalizing problems remained significant, with ECV predicting more problems.

Additional information

Funding

This research was supported by grants from the William T. Grant Foundation and the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression

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