1. Socioeconomic differences in children's victimization to maternal and paternal violence: a register-based study.
- Author
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Ellonen, Noora, Pitkänen, Joonas, Aaltonen, Mikko, Remes, Hanna, and Martikainen, Pekka
- Subjects
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VICTIMS , *SELF-evaluation , *RESEARCH funding , *CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) , *INCOME , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *CHILD abuse , *PARENT-child relationships , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *SEX distribution , *PARENTING , *AGE distribution , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *ODDS ratio , *DOMESTIC violence , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Aims: To explore the potential of administrative data in assessment of the association between parental socioeconomic position (SEP) and children's violent victimization by biological parents. Methods: A longitudinal register-linkage study based on child–mother and child–father data, including all children born in Finland between 1991 and 2017. The data included 1,535,428 children, 796,335 biological mothers, and 775,966 fathers. We used logistic regression with person-years as observations and cluster-robust standard errors to predict children's violent victimization in 2009–2018 and assessed effect modification by child's age and gender. Results: For the SEP indicators, lower maternal education (adjusted odds ratio (OR) 2.90, secondary education OR 1.99) and lower paternal education (OR 2.24, secondary education OR 1.59) were risk factors for violent victimization. Parental social assistance receipt (OR 2.4) and non-employment (OR 1.8–1.9) increased the risk of victimization to maternal and paternal violence. Income was associated with victimization in a gradient-like manner, with ORs ranging from 1.14 to 1.98 among mothers and from 1.29 to 2.56 among fathers. Children with low parental SEP were at the highest risk of parental violence, particularly paternal violence, at ages 3−8 years. Conclusions: All indicators of low SEP increased the risk of children experiencing both maternal and paternal physical violence, especially at ages 3–8 years. Longitudinal register data—because of large samples, no nonresponse or self-report bias, and the possibility to analyze violence committed by mother and father and age-groups separately—have great potential for comprehensive research on the risk factors of parental violence that are difficult to reliably assess with other types of data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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