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From violence in the home to physical dating violence victimization : the mediating role of psychological distress in a prospective study of female adolescents Michele Cascardi

By: Cascardi, Michele.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Journal of Youth and Adolescence.Publisher: Springer, 2016Subject(s): ADOLESCENT RELATIONSHIP ABUSE | ANXIETY | CHILD EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE | DATING VIOLENCE | DEPRESSION | POST TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER | PSYCHOLOGICAL ASPECTS | RISK FACTORS | YOUNG WOMEN | UNITED STATES | CHILD ABUSEOnline resources: Read the abstract In: Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2016, Advance online publication, 22 February 2016Summary: Symptoms of psychological distress may be one pathway through which child maltreatment and witnessing violence in the home relate to dating violence victimization. This study examined whether psychological distress in mid-adolescence mediated the link between child maltreatment and witnessing violence in early adolescence and dating violence victimization in young adulthood. The sample included female participants (N =532) from the United States National Survey of Child and Adolescent Well Being who were 18 years or older in the fifth and final wave of data collection. Results showed that psychological distress may play a causal role in the relationship of violence in the home to dating violence victimisation. Interventions targeting psychological distress, particularly in samples at risk for child maltreatment, may reduce the risk of dating violence victimisation. (From the abstract). Record 4946
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Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2016, Advance online publication, 22 February 2016

Symptoms of psychological distress may be one pathway through which child maltreatment and witnessing violence in the home relate to dating violence victimization. This study examined whether psychological distress in mid-adolescence mediated the link between child maltreatment and witnessing violence in early adolescence and dating violence victimization in young adulthood. The sample included female participants (N
=532) from the United States National Survey of Child and Adolescent Well Being who were 18 years or older in the fifth and final wave of data collection. Results showed that psychological distress may play a causal role in the relationship of violence in the home to dating violence victimisation. Interventions targeting psychological distress, particularly in samples at risk for child maltreatment, may reduce the risk of dating violence victimisation. (From the abstract). Record 4946