Department of Health Sciences, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, 9700 AD Groningen, the Netherlands.
J Adolesc Health. 2010 Feb;46(2):189-96. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2009.06.004. Epub 2009 Aug 12.
Behavioral problems occur more frequently among adolescents in deprived areas, but most evidence concerns urbanized areas. Our aim was to assess the impact of area deprivation and urbanization on the occurrence and development of behavioral problems among adolescents in a mixed urban and rural area and to examine the contributory factors.
We obtained data from the first two waves (n=2,230; mean ages, 11.5 and 13.5 years respectively; response at follow-up, 96.4%) of the TRacking Adolescents' Individual Lives Survey (TRAILS). TRAILS is a prospective study of adolescent mental health in a mixed urban and rural region of the Netherlands. We assessed adolescent behavioral problems using the parent-reported Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL), the adolescent-reported Youth Self-Report (YSR) and the Antisocial Behavior Scale (ABS). Living areas were categorized into tertiles of deprivation. We further collected data on child temperament, perceived rearing style, parental socioeconomic position (education, income and occupation), family composition, and parental mental health history.
At baseline, adolescents living in the most deprived tertile more frequently had elevated behavioral problem scores than those from the least deprived tertile on the CBCL (11.2% against 7.1%), YSR (11.9% against 6.9%), and ASB (11.5% against 7.4%) (all p < .05). Socioeconomic position explained half of the differences due to area deprivation. Other familial and parental characteristics did not significantly contribute to the explanation of observed area differences.
As in highly urbanized areas, behavioral problems occur more frequently among adolescents in deprived mixed rural and urban areas. Urbanization has little effect on these area differences.
贫困地区青少年出现行为问题的频率更高,但大多数证据都涉及城市化地区。我们的目的是评估在城乡混合地区,贫困程度和城市化对青少年行为问题的发生和发展的影响,并探讨其促成因素。
我们从荷兰城乡混合地区青少年心理健康的前瞻性研究——青少年生活轨迹研究(TRAILS)的前两个波次(n=2230;平均年龄分别为 11.5 岁和 13.5 岁;随访时的应答率为 96.4%)中获得了数据。TRAILS 使用父母报告的儿童行为检查表(CBCL)、青少年报告的青少年自我报告(YSR)和反社会行为量表(ABS)评估青少年的行为问题。居住区域被划分为贫困程度的三分位数。我们还收集了儿童气质、感知养育方式、父母的社会经济地位(教育、收入和职业)、家庭结构以及父母的精神健康史等数据。
在基线时,处于最贫困三分位数的青少年在 CBCL(11.2%对 7.1%)、YSR(11.9%对 6.9%)和 ABS(11.5%对 7.4%)上的行为问题评分高于处于最不贫困三分位数的青少年(均 p<.05)。社会经济地位解释了由于地区贫困造成的差异的一半。其他家庭和父母特征对观察到的地区差异的解释没有显著贡献。
与高度城市化地区一样,贫困程度较高的城乡混合地区青少年的行为问题更为常见。城市化对这些地区差异的影响很小。