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1.
J Abnorm Child Psychol ; 44(4): 719-30, 2016 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26329481

ABSTRACT

Children parentally bereaved by AIDS experience high rates of mental health problems. However, there is considerable variability in outcomes, and some show no mental health problems even when followed over time. Primary aims were to identify predictors of resilient adaptation at child, family and community levels within a group of AIDS-orphaned children, and to consider their cumulative influence. A secondary aim was to test whether predictors were of particular influence among children orphaned by AIDS relative to non-orphaned and other-orphaned children. AIDS-orphaned (n = 290), other-orphaned (n = 163) and non-orphaned (n = 202) adolescents living in informal settlements in Cape Town, South Africa were assessed on two occasions 4 years apart (mean age 13.5 years at Time 1, range = 10-19 years). Self-report mental health screens were used to operationalise resilience in AIDS-orphaned children as the absence of clinical-range symptoms of PTSD, anxiety, depression, conduct problems, and suicidality. A quarter of AIDS-orphaned children (24 %) showed no evidence of mental health problems at either wave. Child physical health, better caregiving quality, food security, better peer relationship quality, and lower exposure to community violence, bullying or stigma at baseline predicted sustained resilience. There were cumulative influences across predictors. Associations with mental health showed little variation by child age or gender, or between orphaned and non-orphaned children. Mental health resilience is associated with multiple processes across child, family and community levels of influence. Caution is needed in making causal inferences.


Subject(s)
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/psychology , Bereavement , Depression/psychology , Parental Death/psychology , Resilience, Psychological , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Orphaned/psychology , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Male , South Africa , Urban Population , Young Adult
2.
Child Dev ; 82(2): 533-54, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21410922

ABSTRACT

This study contributes to ongoing scholarship at the nexus of translational research, education reform, and the developmental and prevention sciences. It reports 2-year experimental impacts of a universal, integrated school-based intervention in social-emotional learning and literacy development on children's social-emotional, behavioral, and academic functioning. The study employed a school-randomized, experimental design with 1,184 children in 18 elementary schools. Children in the intervention schools showed improvements across several domains: self-reports of hostile attributional bias, aggressive interpersonal negotiation strategies, and depression, and teacher reports of attention skills, and aggressive and socially competent behavior. In addition, there were effects of the intervention on children's math and reading achievement for those identified by teachers at baseline at highest behavioral risk. These findings are interpreted in light of developmental cascades theory and lend support to the value of universal, integrated interventions in the elementary school period for promoting children's social-emotional and academic skills.


Subject(s)
Achievement , Child Behavior/psychology , Child Development , Emotions , Psychology, Child , Social Behavior , Aggression , Attention , Child , Depression/prevention & control , Educational Status , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Male , Schools , Treatment Outcome
3.
J Prev Interv Community ; 37(1): 35-47, 2009.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19197673

ABSTRACT

This article describes an innovative means of identifying a neighborhood typology that can be used for analyses of individual-level data that were not obtained through neighborhood-based sampling. A two-step approach was employed. First, exploratory factor analysis was used to reduce the number of neighborhood indicators to five clear factors of neighborhood characteristics. Second, a cluster analytic procedure was used to identify neighborhood types based on the five factors. These analyses resulted in a parsimonious solution of five distinct neighborhood clusters, or types, that constituted a manageable number of categories that could be used for future analyses of individuals grouped within neighborhood types. This method is a promising way to conduct neighborhood impact analyses that maximize the ability of researchers to characterize neighborhoods accurately (without sampling at the neighborhood level) while retaining the ability to conduct analyses of participants grouped within types of neighborhoods.


Subject(s)
Cluster Analysis , Factor Analysis, Statistical , Geographic Information Systems , Residence Characteristics , Adolescent , Censuses , Child , Demography , Female , Humans , Male , New York City , Schools , Small-Area Analysis , Socioeconomic Factors , Violence/prevention & control
4.
Psychol Sci ; 17(6): 478-84, 2006 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16771797

ABSTRACT

In this longitudinal study, the proportion of time preschoolers directed their attention away from rewarding stimuli during a delay-of-gratification task was positively associated with efficiency (greater speed without reduced accuracy) at responding to targets in a go/no-go task more than 10 years later. The overall findings suggest that preschoolers' ability to effectively direct their attention away from tempting aspects of the rewards in a delay-of-gratification task may be a developmental precursor for the ability to perform inhibitory tasks such as the go/no-go task years later. Because performance on the go/no-go task has previously been characterized as involving activation of fronto-striatal regions, the present findings also suggest that performance in the delay-of-gratification task may serve as an early marker of individual differences in the functional integrity of this circuitry.


Subject(s)
Cognition , Inhibition, Psychological , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Male , Prospective Studies , Reaction Time , Wechsler Scales
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