1. Early-adult correlates of maltreatment in girls with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: Increased risk for internalizing symptoms and suicidality
- Author
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Guendelman, Maya D, Owens, Elizabeth B, Galán, Chardee, Gard, Arianna, and Hinshaw, Stephen P
- Subjects
Clinical Research ,Youth Violence ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Mind and Body ,Violence Research ,Mental Health ,Depression ,Child Abuse and Neglect Research ,Brain Disorders ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Adolescent ,Adult Survivors of Child Abuse ,Anxiety ,Anxiety Disorders ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Child ,Child Abuse ,Depressive Disorder ,Feeding and Eating Disorders ,Female ,Humans ,Logistic Models ,Longitudinal Studies ,Odds Ratio ,Prospective Studies ,Risk ,Self Concept ,Self-Injurious Behavior ,Suicidal Ideation ,Suicide ,Attempted ,United States ,Young Adult ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Developmental & Child Psychology - Abstract
We examined whether maltreatment experienced in childhood and/or adolescence prospectively predicts young adult functioning in a diverse and well-characterized sample of females with childhood-diagnosed attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (N = 140). Participants were part of a longitudinal study and carefully evaluated in childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood (M age = 9.6, 14.3, and 19.7 years, respectively), with high retention rates across time. A thorough review of multisource data reliably established maltreatment status for each participant (M κ = 0.78). Thirty-two (22.9%) participants experienced at least one maltreatment type (physical abuse, sexual abuse, or neglect). Criterion variables included a broad array of young adult measures of functioning gleaned from multiple-source, multiple-informant instruments. With stringent statistical control of demographic, prenatal, and family status characteristics as well as baseline levels of the criterion variable in question, maltreated participants were significantly more impaired than nonmaltreated participants with respect to self-harm (suicide attempts), internalizing symptomatology (anxiety and depression), eating disorder symptomatology, and well-being (lower overall self-worth). Effect sizes were medium. Comprising the first longitudinal evidence linking maltreatment with key young adult life impairments among a carefully diagnosed and followed sample of females with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, these findings underscore the clinical importance of trauma experiences within this population.
- Published
- 2016