Abstract Utilizing the 2008 National Survey of Children\u27s Exposure to Violence (NatSCEV), the current study compares past year rates of 7 forms of child victimization (maltreatment, assault, peer victimization, property crime, witnessing family violence and exposure to community violence) across 3 different family structure types (two biological/adoptive parents, single parent, step/cohabiting family) among a representative sample of 4046 U.S. children ages 2-17. The study also considers whether certain social-contextual risk factors help to explain family structure variations in victimization, and the extent to which victimization exposure accounts for family structure differences in distress symptom levels. Findings showed significantl...
Abstract This paper examines the cumulative prevalence of victimization and its impact on mental hea...
Two major themes in the delinquency literature are the roles of family structure and childhood victi...
BACKGROUND: To find any association between family structure and rates of hospitalization as an indi...
Abstract Utilizing the 2008 National Survey of Children\u27s Exposure to Violence (NatSCEV), the cur...
Abstract In a national probability sample of 1,000 children aged 10-17, youth from single parent and...
Abstract In a national probability sample of 1,000 children aged 10-17, youth from single parent and...
Abstract In a national probability sample of 1,000 children aged 10-17, youth from single parent and...
Abstract Based on a nationally representative sample of 2,017 children age 2-9years, this study exam...
Abstract Based on a nationally representative sample of 2,017 children age 2-9years, this study exam...
Abstract Based on a nationally representative sample of 2,017 children age 2-9years, this study exam...
Abstract Based on a nationally representative sample of 2,017 children age 2-9years, this study exam...
Research over the past 30 years highlights the existence of family violence as a major social proble...
Background: To find any association between family structure and rates of hospitalization as an indi...
Abstract This paper examines the cumulative prevalence of victimization and its impact on mental hea...
Abstract This paper examines the cumulative prevalence of victimization and its impact on mental hea...
Abstract This paper examines the cumulative prevalence of victimization and its impact on mental hea...
Two major themes in the delinquency literature are the roles of family structure and childhood victi...
BACKGROUND: To find any association between family structure and rates of hospitalization as an indi...
Abstract Utilizing the 2008 National Survey of Children\u27s Exposure to Violence (NatSCEV), the cur...
Abstract In a national probability sample of 1,000 children aged 10-17, youth from single parent and...
Abstract In a national probability sample of 1,000 children aged 10-17, youth from single parent and...
Abstract In a national probability sample of 1,000 children aged 10-17, youth from single parent and...
Abstract Based on a nationally representative sample of 2,017 children age 2-9years, this study exam...
Abstract Based on a nationally representative sample of 2,017 children age 2-9years, this study exam...
Abstract Based on a nationally representative sample of 2,017 children age 2-9years, this study exam...
Abstract Based on a nationally representative sample of 2,017 children age 2-9years, this study exam...
Research over the past 30 years highlights the existence of family violence as a major social proble...
Background: To find any association between family structure and rates of hospitalization as an indi...
Abstract This paper examines the cumulative prevalence of victimization and its impact on mental hea...
Abstract This paper examines the cumulative prevalence of victimization and its impact on mental hea...
Abstract This paper examines the cumulative prevalence of victimization and its impact on mental hea...
Two major themes in the delinquency literature are the roles of family structure and childhood victi...
BACKGROUND: To find any association between family structure and rates of hospitalization as an indi...