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From maltreatment to psychiatric disorders in childhood and adolescence : the relevance of emotional maltreatment Fransiska Schlensog-Schuster, Jan Keil, Kai Von Klitzing, Gabriela Gniewosz, Charlotte C. Schulz, Andrea Schlesier-Michel, Steffi Mayer, Stephanie Stadelmann, Mirko Döhnert, Annette M. Klein, Susan Sierau, Jody T. Manly, Margaret A. Sheridan and Lars O. White

By: Schlensog-Schuster, Franziska.
Contributor(s): Keil, Jan [et al....] | White, Lars O.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Child Maltreatment.Publisher: Sage, 2002Subject(s): ADOLESCENTS | ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES | CHILD ABUSE | CHILDREN | EMOTIONAL ABUSE | MENTAL HEALTH | RISK FACTORS | YOUNG PEOPLE | INTERNATIONAL | GERMANYOnline resources: DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/10775595221134248 (Open access) In: Child Maltreatment, 2022, First published online. 25 November 2022Summary: Different forms of maltreatment are thought to incur a cumulative and non-specific toll on mental health. However, few large-scale studies draw on psychiatric diagnoses manifesting in early childhood and adolescence to identify sequelae of differential maltreatment exposures, and emotional maltreatment, in particular. Fine-grained multi-source dimensional maltreatment assessments and validated age-appropriate clinical interviews were conducted in a sample of N = 778 3 to 16-year-olds. We aimed to (a) substantiate known patterns of clinical outcomes following maltreatment and (b) analyse relative effects of emotional maltreatment, abuse (physical and sexual), and neglect (physical, supervisory, and moral-legal/educational) using structural equation modeling. Besides confirming known relationships between maltreatment exposures and psychiatric disorders, emotional maltreatment exerted particularly strong effects on internalizing disorders in older youth and externalizing disorders in younger children, accounting for variance over and above abuse and neglect exposures. Our data highlight the toxicity of pathogenic relational experiences from early childhood onwards, urging researchers and practitioners alike to prioritize future work on emotional maltreatment. (Authors' abstract). Record #7931
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Child Maltreatment, 2022, First published online. 25 November 2022

Different forms of maltreatment are thought to incur a cumulative and non-specific toll on mental health. However, few large-scale studies draw on psychiatric diagnoses manifesting in early childhood and adolescence to identify sequelae of differential maltreatment exposures, and emotional maltreatment, in particular. Fine-grained multi-source dimensional maltreatment assessments and validated age-appropriate clinical interviews were conducted in a sample of N = 778 3 to 16-year-olds. We aimed to (a) substantiate known patterns of clinical outcomes following maltreatment and (b) analyse relative effects of emotional maltreatment, abuse (physical and sexual), and neglect (physical, supervisory, and moral-legal/educational) using structural equation modeling. Besides confirming known relationships between maltreatment exposures and psychiatric disorders, emotional maltreatment exerted particularly strong effects on internalizing disorders in older youth and externalizing disorders in younger children, accounting for variance over and above abuse and neglect exposures. Our data highlight the toxicity of pathogenic relational experiences from early childhood onwards, urging researchers and practitioners alike to prioritize future work on emotional maltreatment. (Authors' abstract). Record #7931