4.3 Article

Exploring violence exposure, stress, protective factors and behavioral problems among inner-city youth

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 1-2, Pages 115-129

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1023/A:1025607226122

Keywords

violence exposure; protective factors; externalizing problems; internalizing problems; adolescents

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This study examined relationships between violence exposure, other stressors, family support, and self-concept on self-reported behavioral problems among 320 urban adolescents ( aged 11 18) referred for mental health treatment. Overall, participants reported high levels of violence exposure, with a median of six past encounters with violence as a witness, victim, or through the experiences of associates. All forms of violence exposure ( witnessing, being a victim, knowing of victims) were correlated with internalizing and externalizing behavioral problems for males and females. Total violence exposure predicted behavioral problems among participants, even after controlling for the effects of other risk, demographic and protective factors. Family support and self-concept moderated the influence of life stress and cumulative risk on problem behavior outcomes, but these protective variables did not significantly moderate violence exposure.

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