| Literature DB >> 28321793 |
Lisa M Gargano1, Tenzin Dechen2, James E Cone2, Steven D Stellman2,3, Robert M Brackbill2.
Abstract
Poor school-functioning can be indicative of parent and adolescent mental health and adolescent behavior problems. This study examined 472 adolescents enrolled in the World Trade Center (WTC) Health Registry, with a two-step path analysis, using regression-based models, to unravel the relationships between parent and adolescent mental health, adolescent behavior problems, and adolescent unmet healthcare need (UHCN) on the outcome school-functioning. WTC exposure was associated with UHCN and parental mental health was a significant mediator. There was no evidence that family WTC exposure was associated with UHCN independent of its effect on parental mental health. For the second path, after accounting for the effects of adolescent mental health, behavioral problems, and UHCN, there remained a significant association between parental mental health and school-functioning. Interventions for poor school-functioning should have multiple components which address UHCN, mental health, and behavioral problems, as efforts to address any of these alone may not be sufficient.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescents; School-functioning; Unmet healthcare need; World Trade Center
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28321793 PMCID: PMC5610121 DOI: 10.1007/s11524-017-0143-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Urban Health ISSN: 1099-3460 Impact factor: 3.671
Characteristics of WTCHR adolescents and their parents (n = 472)
| Total | |
|---|---|
| Adolescent characteristics | |
| Age at 9/11 (age at Wave 3) | |
| 0–4 years (10–14 years) | 298 (63.1) |
| 5–8 years (15–18 years) | 174 (36.9) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 235 (49.8) |
| Female | 237 (50.2) |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| White | 253 (53.6) |
| Others | 219 (46.2) |
| School-functioning (Wave 3) | |
| Mean (standard deviation) | 76.5 (±17.5) |
| Unmet healthcare needs (Wave 3) | |
| 0 | 410 (91.3) |
| 1 | 30 (6.7) |
| 2 | 9 (2.0) |
| SDQ scores (Wave 3) | |
| Normal (0–15) | 402 (88.0) |
| Borderline (16–19) | 32 (7.0) |
| Abnormal (20–40) | 23 (5.0) |
| Mental health problems (Wave 3) | |
| 0 | 431 (91.3) |
| 1 | 28 (5.9) |
| 2 | 8 (1.7) |
| 3 | 5 (1.1) |
| Family WTC exposurea | |
| Yes | 162 (34.3) |
| No | 310 (65.7) |
| Parent characteristics (Wave 3) | |
| Household income (2010) | |
| ≤$75,000 | 166 (37.4) |
| >$75,000 | 278 (62.6) |
| Parents education | |
| ≤High school | 65 (14.8) |
| >High school | 374 (85.2) |
| Parent NPD | |
| Yes (K6 ≥ 12) | 56 (11.9) |
| No | 413 (88.1) |
aHaving a family member who was injured or killed in the attacks, or was in the WTC disaster and escaped unharmed
Bivariate correlations of adolescent and parent characteristics
| Variable | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | 6. | 7. | 8. | 9. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. UHCN | 0.26** | 0.16** | 0.12* | −0.21** | 0.09 | 0.01 | −0.22** | −0.20** |
| 2. Parent K6 score | – | 0.28** | 0.23** | −0.29** | 0.12* | −0.03 | −0.02 | −0.15* |
| 3. SDQ score | – | 0.50** | −0.51** | 0.08 | 0.05 | −0.05 | −0.15* | |
| 4. Adolescent mental health | – | −0.48** | 0.09 | 0.08 | −0.03 | −0.09* | ||
| 5. School-functioninga | – | −0.05 | −0.15** | 0.06 | 0.06 | |||
| 6. WTC family exposure | – | −0.06 | 0.17** | 0.17** | ||||
| 7. Age | – | −0.002 | −0.09 | |||||
| 8. Parent education | – | 0.51** | ||||||
| 9. Household income | – |
aOnly variable in which larger numbers are better; for others (UHCN, K6, SDQ, adolescent mental health, and WTC family exposure), bigger numbers mean a poorer outcome
* p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01
Fig. 1Mediation by parental mental health of the relationship between 9/11 exposure and adolescent UHCN controlling for household income. Standardized regression coefficients (standard errors); *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01
Fig. 2Mediation by adolescent’s unmet healthcare needs, adolescent behavior problems, and adolescent mental health of the relationship between parental mental health and adolescent’s school-functioning controlling for adolescent age. Standardized regression coefficients (standard errors); *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01