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Effects of childhood conduct problems and family adversity on health, health behaviors, and service use in early adulthood: Tests of developmental pathways involving adolescent risk taking and depression

Author(s): Todd I. Herrenkohl, Rick Kosterman, W. Alex Mason, J. David Hawkins, Carolyn A. McCarty, & Elizabeth McCauley

Publication: 2010. "Development and Psychopathology" 22, 3 (August): 655-665.

Identifier(s): PubMed ID: 20576185; PMCID: PMC2892805; ISSN: 1469-2198; Citation Key: 7696

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0954579410000349

Publication type: Journal Article

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Abstract:

This study examined a developmental, cascade model that includes childhood risks of conduct problems and family adversity at age 10-12; conduct problems, risk taking, and internalizing during adolescence; and adult outcomes of conduct problems, poor health, health risks, depression, and service use at ages 27 and 30. Analyses showed that childhood conduct problems predicted adolescent conduct problems and risk taking, which in turn, predicted adult conduct problems, health risks, depression, and service use. Childhood family adversity predicted adolescent internalizing, a predictor itself of poor health, depression, and service use at age 27. There was considerable continuity in the same adult outcomes measured over a 3-year period, as well as some cross-domain prediction from variables at age 27 to measures at age 30. Developmental patterns found in these data offer implications for future research and prevention.