Do dimensions of childhood adversity differ in their direct associations with youth psychopathology? A meta-analysis


Journal article


Amy Hyoeun Lee, Yukihiro Kitagawa, Rebecca Mirhashem, Micaela Rodriguez, Romola Hilerio, Kristin Bernard
Development and Psychopathology, 2024

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APA   Click to copy
Lee, A. H., Kitagawa, Y., Mirhashem, R., Rodriguez, M., Hilerio, R., & Bernard, K. (2024). Do dimensions of childhood adversity differ in their direct associations with youth psychopathology? A meta-analysis. Development and Psychopathology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Lee, Amy Hyoeun, Yukihiro Kitagawa, Rebecca Mirhashem, Micaela Rodriguez, Romola Hilerio, and Kristin Bernard. “Do Dimensions of Childhood Adversity Differ in Their Direct Associations with Youth Psychopathology? A Meta-Analysis.” Development and Psychopathology (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
Lee, Amy Hyoeun, et al. “Do Dimensions of Childhood Adversity Differ in Their Direct Associations with Youth Psychopathology? A Meta-Analysis.” Development and Psychopathology, 2024.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{amy2024a,
  title = {Do dimensions of childhood adversity differ in their direct associations with youth psychopathology? A meta-analysis},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {Development and Psychopathology},
  author = {Lee, Amy Hyoeun and Kitagawa, Yukihiro and Mirhashem, Rebecca and Rodriguez, Micaela and Hilerio, Romola and Bernard, Kristin}
}

Abstract

Growing evidence supports the unique pathways by which threat and deprivation, two core dimensions of adversity, confer risk for youth psychopathology. However, the extent to which these dimensions differ in their direct associations with youth psychopathology remains unclear. The primary aim of this preregistered meta-analysis was to synthesize the associations between threat, deprivation, internalizing, externalizing, and trauma-specific psychopathology. Because threat is proposed to be directly linked with socioemotional development, we hypothesized that the magnitude of associations between threat and psychopathology would be larger than those with deprivation. We conducted a search for peer-reviewed articles in English using PubMed and PsycINFO databases through August 2022. Studies that assessed both threat and deprivation and used previously validated measures of youth psychopathology were included. One hundred and twenty-seven articles were included in the synthesis (N = 163,767). Results of our three-level meta-analyses indicated that adversity dimension significantly moderated the associations between adversity and psychopathology, such that the magnitude of effects for threat (r's = .21-26) were consistently larger than those for deprivation (r's = .16-.19). These differences were more pronounced when accounting for the threat-deprivation correlation. Additional significant moderators included emotional abuse and youth self-report of adversity. Findings are consistent with the Dimensional Model of Adversity and Psychopathology, with clinical, research, and policy implications.



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