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Title: Individual and Family Level Risk and Resilience Factors:


1
Individual and Family Level Risk and Resilience
Factors Impact on Internalizing and
Externalizing Behaviors in Middle Childhood T.
Caitlin OBrien, Kathryn Lemery-Chalfant,
Carlos Valiente
Figure1 Interaction of negative parenting and
resilience when predicting childrens
internalizing symptoms
Figure2 Interaction of resilience and ethnicity
when predicting childrens externalizing symptoms
Introduction
Method
Children today encounter many risks that
challenge successful development and research has
illustrated how these risks can lead to
internalizing and externalizing problems. Many
risk factors such as SES are difficult to change
however, other factors may be present to negate
or lessen the impact of growing up in a low
income environment. Further, many theoretical
models of resilience suggest that protective,
compensatory, or resilience factors play a
moderating role, influencing outcomes through
statistical interaction with risk factors.
Following Bronfenbrenners ideology, we propose
that resilience effects may also be additive,
especially with normative samples. Specifically,
we hypothesize that a broad composite of
compensatory factors will have an additive
effect, reducing problem behaviors. Risk Factors
for Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms The
Surgeon General Report estimates that almost
twenty percent of children between the ages of 9
and 17 deal with some form of mental disorder
(Satcher, 1999) and research can contribute to a
clearer understanding of what risk factors are
driving disordered outcomes. Socioeconomic
Status (SES) - Children who experience economic
hardships are at an increased risk for negative
developmental outcomes in normative as well as
selected high or low risk samples, and throughout
development (Carlson Corcoran, 2001). Family
Stress - Family changes and chaos in the home can
be stressful, and have been linked to increased
behavior problems (Valiente, Lemery-Chalfant,
Reiser, in press). Marital conflict is another
family stressor that can lead to higher rates of
internalizing and externalizing problems (Low
Stocker, 2005). Negative Parenting Parental
negative reactions to their childs expression of
negative emotions can lead to both internalizing
and externalizing behaviors (Eisenberg et al.,
1999). Parental lack of knowledge of their
childs behaviors also relates to risky behaviors
(Crouter, Bumpus, Davis, McHale, 2005).
Compensatory Resilience Factors and
Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms
Resilience is a construct with many operational
definitions. It can be seen as a characteristic
of the child, as ordinary development and system
functioning despite less than optimal
circumstances, or as a product of the
relationship between the child and his/her
environment. There is a combination of sources
necessary to reduce vulnerability and increase
resilience. This makes a holistic approach that
integrates multiple levels useful for obtaining a
clear view of resilience (Cook, 2003). Ego
Resilience - Ego resilience is a characteristic
of the child that allows the child to be flexible
and adapt to changing situational demands,
ego-resilient children show little to no
behavioral problems (Eisenberg, Spinrad,
Morris, 2002). Effortful Control - The ability to
self-regulate and suppress a dominant response in
order to perform a secondary response is another
characteristic of the child that relates to fewer
internalizing and externalizing behaviors
(Rothbart Bates, 2006). School Liking - A
childs involvement and liking of his/her school
environment helps him/her to have better academic
outcomes and better transitions through changes
(Ladd Price, 1987). Popularity - Social
relationships with peers are especially important
in the school environment. Positive
relationships and peer standing contribute to the
childs resilience and fewer behavioral problems
(Criss, Pettit, Bates, Dodge, Lopp, 2002).
  • Participants
  • 220 children with a mean age of 9.57.
  • 32 Mexican American, 24 Caucasian, 4 African
    American, 6 American Indian, and 13 of other
    origins.
  • Procedure
  • Teacher and child questionnaires administered at
    school, parent questionnaires mailed to the home
    in the parents
  • chosen language.
  • Children were read all items from their
    questionnaires by a research assistant.
  • Measures
  • Risk Variables
  • Socioeconomic Status
  • Mean composite of primary caregiver employment,
    primary and secondary caregiver education, and
    total family
  • income.
  • Family Stress
  • Confusion, Hubbub, and Order Scale, 10 items on a
    true/false scale (CHAOS Matheny, Wachs, Ludwig,
  • Phillips,1995)
  • Marital Adjustment Test, 10 items on a five point
    scale (MAT Locke Wallace, 1959)
  • Negative Parenting
  • Coping with Childrens Negative Emotions Scale,
    48 items on a seven point scale (CCNES Fabes,
    Eisenberg,
  • Bernzweig,1990)

Figure 3 Interaction of family stress and
ethnicity when predicting childrens
externalizing symptoms
Figure 4 Significant Additive and Interactive
Effects
Ethnicity
Resilience
Internalizing
Family Stress
Externalizing
SES
Neg Parenting
Discussion
Results
  • Summary of Findings
  • The risk composites of SES, family stress, and
    negative parenting all had significant main
    effects on number of externalizing behaviors, but
    were nonsignificant for internalizing.
  • Internalizing may be predicted by risk factors
    not included in this study, such as parental
    psychopathology and behavioral inhibition, or it
    may be that the children were not good reporters
    of their internalizing problems.
  • The resilience composite of ego resilience,
    effortful control, school liking, and popularity
    related significantly to fewer internalizing and
    externalizing behaviors.
  • Resilience was a significant moderator for the
    association between negative parenting and
    internalizing behaviors. The children who were
    one standard deviation above the mean on
    resilience experienced more internalizing
    problems than those who were low on resilience.
  • This interaction works in the opposite direction
    from what was expected. It could be that
    resilient children are better equipped to report
    on internalizing feelings and behaviors than are
    non-resilient children.
  • The relation of resilience to externalizing was
    moderated by ethnicity, in that as resilience
    increased, Caucasian children experienced
    significantly fewer externalizing behavior
    problems than Hispanic children.
  • Future studies should test other measures of
    resilience to see if other aspects of resilience
    are more influential for Hispanic children, such
    as social support or ethnic identity.
  • Ethnicity was also a moderator for the relation
    between family stress and externalizing
    behaviors. As family stress increased, Caucasian
    children exhibited significantly more
    externalizing behaviors while Hispanic children
    did not.
  • This finding supports our hypothesis that
    family-level risk factors will have differential
    impacts in the two cultures. Mexican culture
    values a higher level of familism, and a
    dependence on multiple caregivers and
    family-style living.
  • Conclusions
  • These results underscore the importance of the
    additive effect of resilience in normative
    samples.
  • Limitations include questionable reports of
    internalizing and a non culturally-sensitive
    research design.
  • Children have been suggested to be better
    reporters of unobservable internalizing states
    (Barrett et al., 1991), however it is still more
    difficult to accurately measure internalizing
    than externalizing.
  • As this study was not designed to be a study on
    ethnicity, the results are exploratory. A study
    designed and administered in culturally sensitive
    ways would be able to draw stronger conclusions.
  • Future research should attempt to measure the
    specific risks that children from different
    situations face as well as validate culturally
    sensitive measures of risk and resilience in
    different ethnicities and include a broader
    spectrum of possible resilience factors.
  • Principle component analysis was used to
    identify a broad composite of resilience, onto
    which ego resilience, effortful control, school
    liking, and popularity loaded.
  • SES, family stress, and negative parenting were
    significant predictors of parent report
    externalizing. The resilience component was a
    significant predictor of both parent report
    externalizing and child report internalizing.
    The risk factors were not significant predictors
    of internalizing.
  • Interaction terms were tested for each risk
    factor by resilience and then by ethnicity
    (Hispanic vs. Caucasian), significant additive
    and interactive effects are in bold.


Hypotheses
  • Risk and resilience will jointly predict child
    psychopathology in a linear (additive) fashion.
  • Risk composites will increase the occurrence of
    internalizing and externalizing behaviors.
  • The resilience component will have a compensatory
    effect, decreasing the occurrence of
    internalizing and externalizing behaviors.
  • The interaction term Ethnicity (Mexican
    American vs. Caucasian) will moderate the
    pathways from risk and resilience to
    internalizing and externalizing behaviors.
    Resilience is expected to differ by culture and
    ethnicity, and the family-level risk factors are
    expected to be less predictive for Mexican
    American children because of a higher level of
    familism and dependence on multiple caregivers in
    the Mexican culture.

Table 1 Additive and Interactive Risk and
Resilience Influences on Internalizing and
Externalizing Behaviors.
Risk
Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms
Resilience
Ethnicity
Risk
Internalizing and Externalizing Symptoms
Resilience
Note. ß Standardized Beta Coefficient. plt.10
plt.05 plt.01 plt.001
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