Literature DB >> 19811826

Child maltreatment and adult socioeconomic well-being.

David S Zielinski1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Little empirical research has examined the impact that child maltreatment may have on victims' long-term socioeconomic well-being. The current study sought to address this gap by exploring the relationship between childhood experiences of abuse and neglect and several indicators of socioeconomic well-being in adulthood.
METHOD: Data from the nationally representative National Comorbidity Survey (NCS) (n=5004) were analyzed using logistic regression models to examine whether maltreatment in childhood (any maltreatment, physical abuse, sexual abuse, severe neglect, and multiple types of maltreatment) affected employment status, income, and health care coverage in adulthood. Several potential confounds of this relationship were included as covariates in the models, including race, sex, age, and several indicators of childhood socioeconomic status (SES).
RESULTS: The results show that adults who had experienced maltreatment differed significantly from non-maltreated adults across each of the socioeconomic domains examined. Effects were additionally found to differ depending on the number of types of maltreatment experienced.
CONCLUSIONS: Increased rates of unemployment, poverty, and Medicaid usage indicate the significant long-term personal impact of early victimization. They also suggest a substantial societal cost from this problem through lost economic productivity and tax revenue, and increased social spending. Low socioeconomic status among parents has also been identified as a salient risk factor for the perpetration of maltreatment, and, as such, these results indicate a potential mechanism in the intergenerational transmission of violence. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: The findings from this study suggest that victims of child maltreatment are at increased risk for financial and employment-related difficulties in adulthood. Approximately one million children are identified each year by state agencies as victims of maltreatment in the United States. Many maltreated children, furthermore, go undetected by protective service agencies, indicating the high prevalence of this problem, and underscoring its large economic costs to society. By highlighting the long-term socioeconomic costs of maltreatment, this research should encourage policy makers to focus on improving prevention, intervention, and treatment efforts for victims of abuse and neglect.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19811826     DOI: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2009.09.001

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


  61 in total

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7.  Accounting for the association between childhood maltreatment and alcohol-use disorders in males: a twin study.

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8.  Altered brain network integrity after childhood maltreatment: A structural connectomic DTI-study.

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9.  Childhood Maltreatment and Impulsivity: A Meta-Analysis and Recommendations for Future Study.

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Review 10.  Intergenerational transmission of the effects of maternal exposure to childhood maltreatment on offspring obesity risk: A fetal programming perspective.

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