Literature DB >> 31041619

Understanding the Buffering Effects of Protective Factors on the Relationship between Adverse Childhood Experiences and Teen Dating Violence Perpetration.

Jordan P Davis1, Katie A Ports2, Kathleen C Basile2, Dorothy L Espelage3, Corinne F David-Ferdon2.   

Abstract

Prior research has demonstrated the scope and impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) on health and wellbeing. Less is known about the trajectories from exposure to ACEs, such as witnessing family conflict and violence in the community, to teen dating violence perpetration, and the protective factors that buffer the association between early exposure to ACEs and later teen dating violence perpetration. Students (n = 1611) completed self-report surveys six times during middle and high school from 2008 to 2013. In early middle school, the sub-sample was 50.2% female and racially/ethnically diverse: 47.7% Black, 36.4% White, 3.4% Hispanic, 1.7% Asian/Pacific Islander, and 10.8% other. Youth were, on average, 12.7 years old. Latent transition analysis was used to assess how trajectories of exposure to parental conflict and community violence during middle school transition into classes of teen dating violence perpetration (e.g., sexual, physical, threatening, relational, and verbal) in high school. Protective factors were then analyzed as moderators of the transition probabilities. Three class trajectories of ACEs during middle school were identified: decreasing family conflict and increasing community violence (n = 103; 6.4%), stable low family conflict and stable low community violence (n = 1027; 63.7%), stable high family conflict and stable high community violence (n = 481; 29.9%). A three class solution for teen dating violence perpetration in high school was found: high all teen dating violence class (n = 113; 7.0%), physical and verbal only teen dating violence class (n = 335; 20.8%), and low all teen dating violence class (n = 1163; 72.2%). Social support, empathy, school belonging and parental monitoring buffered some transitions from ACEs exposure trajectory classes to teen dating violence perpetration classes. Comprehensive prevention strategies that address multiple forms of violence while bolstering protective factors across the social ecology may buffer negative effects of exposure to violence in adolescence.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adolescent; Adverse childhood experiences; Development; PTSD; Teen dating violence; Trauma

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31041619      PMCID: PMC6821577          DOI: 10.1007/s10964-019-01028-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Youth Adolesc        ISSN: 0047-2891


  51 in total

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5.  Longitudinal Examination of the Bullying-Sexual Violence Pathway across Early to Late Adolescence: Implicating Homophobic Name-Calling.

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Review 7.  Beyond correlates: a review of risk and protective factors for adolescent dating violence perpetration.

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8.  A revised inventory of Adverse Childhood Experiences.

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9.  Childhood adversity and adult chronic disease: an update from ten states and the District of Columbia, 2010.

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10.  Teen Dating Violence Perpetration: Protective Factor Trajectories from Middle to High School among Adolescents.

Authors:  Dorothy L Espelage; Ruth W Leemis; Phyllis Holditch Niolon; Megan Kearns; Kathleen C Basile; Jordan P Davis
Journal:  J Res Adolesc       Date:  2019-06-06
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  5 in total

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