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Correlates of Externalizing Behavior Symptoms Among Youth Within Two Impoverished, Urban Communities

NCJ Number
233219
Journal
Child & Youth Services Volume: 31 Issue: 3/4 Dated: July - December 2009 Pages: 92-120
Author(s)
Geetha Gopalan; Mary A. Cavaleri; William M. Bannon; Mary M. McKay
Date Published
December 2009
Length
29 pages
Annotation
This study examines whether risk factors associated with child externalizing behavior symptoms differ between two similar low-income, urban communities.
Abstract
This study examines whether risk factors associated with child externalizing behavior symptoms differ between two similar low-income, urban communities, using baseline parent data of 154 African-American youth (ages 9-15) participating in the Collaborative HIV-Prevention and Adolescent Mental Health Project (CHAMP) family program. Separate multiple regression analyses of each city sample indicated that greater child externalizing symptoms were associated with increasing parenting hassles for New York families (n = 46), but greater parent mental health symptoms for participants in Chicago (n = 108). Understanding such distinctions between communities is an important first step toward tailoring services to unique community needs. (Published Abstract)