| Literature DB >> 29163090 |
Linda Kersten1, Noortje Vriends1, Martin Steppan1, Nora M Raschle1, Martin Praetzlich1, Helena Oldenhof2, Robert Vermeiren2, Lucres Jansen2, Katharina Ackermann3, Anka Bernhard3, Anne Martinelli3, Karen Gonzalez-Madruga4, Ignazio Puzzo5, Amy Wells4, Jack C Rogers6, Roberta Clanton6, Rosalind H Baker6, Liam Grisley6, Sarah Baumann7, Malou Gundlach7, Gregor Kohls7, Miguel A Gonzalez-Torres8, Eva Sesma-Pardo8, Roberta Dochnal9, Helen Lazaratou10, Zacharias Kalogerakis10, Aitana Bigorra Gualba11, Areti Smaragdi12, Réka Siklósi9, Dimitris Dikeos13, Amaia Hervás11, Aranzazu Fernández-Rivas8, Stephane A De Brito6, Kerstin Konrad7, Beate Herpertz-Dahlmann7, Graeme Fairchild14, Christine M Freitag3, Arne Popma2, Meinhard Kieser15, Christina Stadler1.
Abstract
Exposure to community violence through witnessing or being directly victimized has been associated with conduct problems in a range of studies. However, the relationship between community violence exposure (CVE) and conduct problems has never been studied separately in healthy individuals and individuals with conduct disorder (CD). Therefore, it is not clear whether the association between CVE and conduct problems is due to confounding factors, because those with high conduct problems also tend to live in more violent neighborhoods, i.e., an ecological fallacy. Hence, the aim of the present study was: (1) to investigate whether the association between recent CVE and current conduct problems holds true for healthy controls as well as adolescents with a diagnosis of CD; (2) to examine whether the association is stable in both groups when including effects of aggression subtypes (proactive/reactive aggression), age, gender, site and socioeconomic status (SES); and (3) to test whether proactive or reactive aggression mediate the link between CVE and conduct problems. Data from 1178 children and adolescents (62% female; 44% CD) aged between 9 years and 18 years from seven European countries were analyzed. Conduct problems were assessed using the Kiddie-Schedule of Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia diagnostic interview. Information about CVE and aggression subtypes was obtained using self-report questionnaires (Social and Health Assessment and Reactive-Proactive aggression Questionnaire (RPQ), respectively). The association between witnessing community violence and conduct problems was significant in both groups (adolescents with CD and healthy controls). The association was also stable after examining the mediating effects of aggression subtypes while including moderating effects of age, gender and SES and controlling for effects of site in both groups. There were no clear differences between the groups in the strength of the association between witnessing violence and conduct problems. However, we found evidence for a ceiling effect, i.e., individuals with very high levels of conduct problems could not show a further increase if exposed to CVE and vice versa. Results indicate that there was no evidence for an ecological fallacy being the primary cause of the association, i.e., CVE must be considered a valid risk factor in the etiology of CD.Entities:
Keywords: adolescence; antisocial behavior; community violence exposure; conduct disorder; proactive aggression; reactive aggression
Year: 2017 PMID: 29163090 PMCID: PMC5681536 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Parcel composition and standardized loadings of parceled indicators by group.
| Witnessing items | Victimization items | Witnessing loading (CD/Control) | Victimization loading (CD/Control) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parcel 1 | Beat up | Beat up | 0.88/0.65 | 0.85/0.68 |
| Gun shot | Gun shot | |||
| Discrimination | Discrimination | |||
| Parcel 2 | Chasing | Chasing | 0.84/0.88 | 0.75/0.63 |
| Threats | Knife attack | |||
| Parcel 3 | Knife attack | Threats | 0.85/0.87 | 0.81/0.59 |
| Serious wound | Serious wound |
Figure 1Mean scores (with a possible range of 0–4) for SAHA witnessing violence and victimization subscales within the past year reported by healthy controls (n = 662) and children and adolescents with conduct disorder (CD; n = 516). ***p < 0.001.
SAHA witnessing subscale items and reactive and proactive aggression questionnaire mean scores by group.
| Witnessing item | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1. Being chased by gangs/individuals | 0.73 (45.0) | 0.16 (12.6) |
| 2. Get threatened with serious physical harm | 0.99 (55.1) | 0.21 (16.4) |
| 3. Getting beaten up/mugged | 0.84 (47.4) | 0.18 (14.0) |
| 4. Being attacked/stabbed with a knife | 0.43 (28.6) | 0.05 (4.4) |
| 5. Seriously wounded after an incident of violence | 0.60 (38.0) | 0.12 (9.6) |
| 6. Getting shot/shot at with a gun | 0.18 (13.6) | 0.02 (0.9) |
| 7. Getting threatened/harmed for their race/ethnicity | 0.61 (34.3) | 0.16 (12.5) |
| Reactive aggression | 1.07 (0.461) | 0.50 (0.331) |
| Proactive aggression | 0.38 (0.381) | 0.10 (0.131) |
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Figure 2(A) Two-dimensional density plot for community violence exposure (CVE; x-axis) and current conduct problems (y-axis) for adolescents with CD (top) and healthy controls (bottom) using plot3D. (B) Scatterplot and linear (green) and loess (red) regression line for CVE (x-axis) and conduct problems (y-axis) for adolescents with CD (top) and controls (bottom) ggplot2. (C) Histograms for both CVE and current conduct problems for adolescents with CD and controls. (D) Stability of the correlation between CVE and current conduct problems along the range of both variables (high correlations = green; low correlations = purple) using {localgauss}.
Fit statistics for all models.
| Measure/Model | χ2(df) | RMSEA | CFI |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Mediation | |||
| 1.1 No direct path3 | 152.21 (19) | 0.075 (0.064; 0.086) | 0.969 |
| 1.2 Total effects4 | 87.75 (18) | 0.056 (0.044; 0.067) | 0.984 |
| Change in fit 1.1–1.2 | 130.81 (1), | ||
| 2. Mediation | |||
| 2.1 No direct path3 | 156.08 (38) | 0.051 (0.043; 0.060) | 0.953 |
| 2.2 Total effects4 | 129.88 (36) | 0.047 (0.038; 0.056) | 0.963 |
| Change in fit 2.1–2.2 | 26.2 (12), | ||
| 2.3 Total effects4 | 188.07 (41) | 0.054 (0.046; 0.061) | 0.942 |
| Change in fit 2.3–2.2 | 58.19 (5), | ||
| 2.4 Total effects4 | 130.78 (37) | 0.045 (0.037; 0.053) | 0.963 |
| Change in fit 2.4–2.2 | 0.9 (1), | ||
| 2.5 Total effects4 | 146.25 (51) | 0.039 (0.031; 0.046) | 0.962 |
| Change in fit 2.5–2.4 | 15.47 (14), |
.
Figure 3Standardized path coefficients of mediation analysis by group. Note: results for CD group are displayed in bold, with those for the control group presented in normal font; coefficients in brackets represent the direct path model (analyses were controlled for site); only significant coefficients are displayed. ***p < 0.001; **p < 0.01; *p < 0.05.