| Literature DB >> 21494415 |
Paula S Nurius1, Patricia L Russell, Jerald R Herting, Carole Hooven, Elaine A Thompson.
Abstract
This investigation integrated violence exposure with critical risk and protective factors linked to healthy adolescent adaptation and transition into early adulthood. A racially diverse sample of 848 adolescents identified as at-risk for school drop-out were assessed for no, single, or multiple forms of violence exposure. MANOVA tests revealed that youth with single form victimization fared more poorly than never-exposed youth, and that multiple-form victimization held the greatest jeopardy to development. Youth with multiple-form victimization reported significantly elevated risk factors (emotional distress, life stress, suicide risk, risky behaviors) and lower protective factors (social support, school engagement, family structure) than both single-form and never-exposed youth. Implications are discussed for preventive and early intervention programming and for examining the transition of at-risk youth into young adulthood.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 21494415 PMCID: PMC3074432 DOI: 10.1080/19361520902880798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Adolesc Trauma ISSN: 1936-1521