Department of Population, Family, and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Department of Criminology & Criminal Justice, University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78207, USA.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Mar 25;18(7):3384. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18073384.
Research points to parental incarceration as an important social determinant of child health. Even so, studies examining the health impact of parental incarceration in the context of diverse childhood stressors and adversities are lacking. The present study uses a large, nationally representative sample to compare U.S. children who were exposed to parental incarceration to a strategic comparison group of U.S. children who were not exposed to parental incarceration, but were nonetheless exposed to alternative family stressors and adversities. The initial findings generally reveal worse health among children exposed to parental incarceration compared to those who are not exposed. Even so, these differences were partially or completely attenuated when comparing the incarceration-exposed group to more comparable groups of children exposed to a varying degree of alternative stressors/adversities. Programmatic efforts targeting parental incarceration as a means of promoting child health may be enhanced by adequately addressing co-occurring family stressors and child adversities.
研究指出,父母入狱是儿童健康的一个重要社会决定因素。即便如此,在研究父母入狱对儿童健康的影响时,缺乏对不同儿童压力源和逆境的考量。本研究使用一个大型的全国代表性样本,将经历过父母入狱的美国儿童与一个具有战略意义的对照组进行比较,后者的父母没有入狱,但却经历了其他家庭压力源和逆境。初步研究结果普遍显示,与未经历过父母入狱的儿童相比,经历过父母入狱的儿童健康状况更差。即便如此,当将入狱儿童与经历不同程度替代压力源/逆境的更具可比性的儿童群体进行比较时,这些差异在一定程度上或完全减弱。以父母入狱为手段促进儿童健康的项目努力,可能会通过充分解决同时存在的家庭压力源和儿童逆境问题得到加强。