Literature DB >> 10604060

Neighborhoods and child maltreatment: a multi-level study.

C J Coulton1, J E Korbin, M Su.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To better understand how neighborhood and individual factors are related to child maltreatment.
METHOD: Using an ecological framework, a multi-level model (Hierarchical Linear Modeling) was used to analyze neighborhood structural conditions and individual risk factors for child abuse and neglect. Parents (n = 400) of children under the age of 18 were systematically selected from 20 randomly selected census-defined block groups with different risk profiles for child maltreatment report rates. Parents were administered the Neighborhood Environment for Children Rating Scales, the Child Abuse Potential Inventory, the Zimet measure of social support, and the Conflict Tactics Scales as a measure of childhood experience with violence.
RESULTS: Neighborhood factors of impoverishment and child care burden significantly affect child abuse potential after controlling for individual risk factors. However, neighborhood effects are weaker than they appear to be in aggregate studies of official child maltreatment reports. Variation in child abuse potential within neighborhoods is greater than between neighborhoods. However, adverse neighborhood conditions weakend the effects of known individual risk and protective factors, such as violence in the family of origin.
CONCLUSIONS: If individual potential for child maltreatment is more evenly distributed across neighborhoods than reported maltreatment, then neighborhood and community play an important, if as yet unspecified, role in child maltreatment. Multi-level models are a promising research strategy for disentangling the complex interactions of individual and contextual factors in child maltreatment.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 10604060     DOI: 10.1016/s0145-2134(99)00076-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Abuse Negl        ISSN: 0145-2134


  62 in total

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5.  Exposure to violence in adolescence and precocious role exits.

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6.  Inadequate child supervision: The role of alcohol outlet density, parent drinking behaviors, and social support.

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7.  Two sides of the same neighborhood? Multilevel analysis of residents' and child-welfare workers' perspectives on neighborhood social disorder and collective efficacy.

Authors:  Daphna Gross-Manos; Bridget M Haas; Francisca Richter; David Crampton; Jill E Korbin; Claudia J Coulton; James C Spilsbury
Journal:  Am J Orthopsychiatry       Date:  2018-07-23

8.  Neighborhood alcohol outlet density and rates of child abuse and neglect: moderating effects of access to substance abuse services.

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9.  The Moderating Effect of Substance Abuse Service Accessibility on the Relationship between Child Maltreatment and Neighborhood Alcohol Availability.

Authors:  Cory M Morton
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10.  Why Does Child Maltreatment Occur? Caregiver Perspectives and Analyses of Neighborhood Structural Factors Across Twenty Years.

Authors:  Daphna Gross-Manos; Bridget M Haas; Francisca Richter; Jill E Korbin; Claudia J Coulton; David Crampton; James C Spilsbury
Journal:  Child Youth Serv Rev       Date:  2019-02-01
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