Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring

There is evidence from longitudinal studies of individuals with childhood problem behaviours that this behavioural risk may translate into health-risk and health problems in adulthood, with implications for health-risk in the next generation. The purpose of this dissertation was to examine the long-...

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Main Author: De Genna, Natacha
Format: Others
Published: 2005
Online Access:http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/8899/1/NR16274.pdf
De Genna, Natacha <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/De_Genna=3ANatacha=3A=3A.html> (2005) Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring. PhD thesis, Concordia University.
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMG.88992013-10-22T03:46:13Z Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring De Genna, Natacha There is evidence from longitudinal studies of individuals with childhood problem behaviours that this behavioural risk may translate into health-risk and health problems in adulthood, with implications for health-risk in the next generation. The purpose of this dissertation was to examine the long-term sequelae of childhood aggression and withdrawal on health-risk, health problems, and health-promoting behaviours such as preventative care and use of services. The Concordia Longitudinal Risk Project is a prospective, inter-generational study of individuals from disadvantaged neighborhoods in Montreal, including girls and boys who were selected for extreme levels of aggression and social withdrawal. These individuals were followed across childhood and into adulthood, allowing us to examine processes of continuity and change, primarily experiential factors that precede and support cessation of unhealthy behaviour. In the inter-generational phase of the project, mothers were visited at home at two time points: when offspring were 1-6 years old, and again at 9-12 years old. At both waves of testing, mothers were interviewed about their health-risk, and medical histories were taken for mothers and their target child. In addition, during Study 1 mothers were asked about their adolescent health-risk behaviours and provided obstetric histories, and were asked in Study 2 about preventative health behaviours and use of developmental and medical services. Results indicated that girls who were both highly aggressive and socially withdrawn showed the earliest signs of health-risk behaviour, and that adolescent health risk behaviour was a marker for poor health management in adulthood. Girlhood aggression was a risk factor for health-risk behaviour in both studies, and maternal health-risk behaviours were shown to have a direct impact on health outcomes in offspring. Although the pattern was not as clear for childhood withdrawal, this characteristic appeared to be linked more closely to psychosocial risk than medical risk. Offspring of withdrawn parents were more likely to be prescribed medication during the second wave of testing. Taken together, there was evidence that early problem behaviour was linked to health-risk in adulthood and for young offspring. The results of these two studies have important implications for the long-term sequelae of childhood aggression and withdrawal, and the inter-generational transfer of health-risk. 2005 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/8899/1/NR16274.pdf De Genna, Natacha <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/De_Genna=3ANatacha=3A=3A.html> (2005) Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring. PhD thesis, Concordia University. http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/8899/
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format Others
sources NDLTD
description There is evidence from longitudinal studies of individuals with childhood problem behaviours that this behavioural risk may translate into health-risk and health problems in adulthood, with implications for health-risk in the next generation. The purpose of this dissertation was to examine the long-term sequelae of childhood aggression and withdrawal on health-risk, health problems, and health-promoting behaviours such as preventative care and use of services. The Concordia Longitudinal Risk Project is a prospective, inter-generational study of individuals from disadvantaged neighborhoods in Montreal, including girls and boys who were selected for extreme levels of aggression and social withdrawal. These individuals were followed across childhood and into adulthood, allowing us to examine processes of continuity and change, primarily experiential factors that precede and support cessation of unhealthy behaviour. In the inter-generational phase of the project, mothers were visited at home at two time points: when offspring were 1-6 years old, and again at 9-12 years old. At both waves of testing, mothers were interviewed about their health-risk, and medical histories were taken for mothers and their target child. In addition, during Study 1 mothers were asked about their adolescent health-risk behaviours and provided obstetric histories, and were asked in Study 2 about preventative health behaviours and use of developmental and medical services. Results indicated that girls who were both highly aggressive and socially withdrawn showed the earliest signs of health-risk behaviour, and that adolescent health risk behaviour was a marker for poor health management in adulthood. Girlhood aggression was a risk factor for health-risk behaviour in both studies, and maternal health-risk behaviours were shown to have a direct impact on health outcomes in offspring. Although the pattern was not as clear for childhood withdrawal, this characteristic appeared to be linked more closely to psychosocial risk than medical risk. Offspring of withdrawn parents were more likely to be prescribed medication during the second wave of testing. Taken together, there was evidence that early problem behaviour was linked to health-risk in adulthood and for young offspring. The results of these two studies have important implications for the long-term sequelae of childhood aggression and withdrawal, and the inter-generational transfer of health-risk.
author De Genna, Natacha
spellingShingle De Genna, Natacha
Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring
author_facet De Genna, Natacha
author_sort De Genna, Natacha
title Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring
title_short Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring
title_full Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring
title_fullStr Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring
title_full_unstemmed Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring
title_sort problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring
publishDate 2005
url http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/8899/1/NR16274.pdf
De Genna, Natacha <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/De_Genna=3ANatacha=3A=3A.html> (2005) Problem behaviour and health problems : an inter-generational study of parents with childhood histories of aggression and social withdrawal with their offspring. PhD thesis, Concordia University.
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