Article contents
Developmental pathways from maltreatment to risk behavior: Sexual behavior as a catalyst
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 September 2017
Abstract
Although delinquency, substance use, and sexual activity are established to be highly intercorrelated, the extant research provides minimal evidence in support of one particular sequence of risk behavior or on the cascade effects from maltreatment. The present study tested a longitudinal model incorporating maltreatment, deviant peers, sexual behavior, delinquency, and substance use to elucidate the sequential pathway(s) from maltreatment to each specific risk behavior throughout adolescence. Data came from a longitudinal study on the effects of maltreatment on adolescent development (N = 454) with four study assessments from early (Time 1 M age = 10.98) to late adolescence (Time 4 M age = 18.22). Results from the cross-lagged model showed a sequence from maltreatment to sexual behavior (Time 1), to delinquency (Time 2), to sexual behavior (Time 3), to substance use and delinquency (Time 4). These findings support sexual behavior as the initial risk behavior that is the catalyst for engagement in more advanced risk behaviors across adolescence.
- Type
- Regular Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017
Footnotes
This study was funded by National Institutes of Health Grants R01HD39129, R01DAa024569 (to P.K. Trickett, Principal Investigator), and K01HD069457 (to S.N., Principal Investigator). I would like to recognize Penny Trickett's contribution to the study of maltreatment and her influence on my training as a child maltreatment researcher. This paper would not have been possible without her. She will be greatly missed.
References
- 13
- Cited by