Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
Department of Psychiatry.
J Consult Clin Psychol. 2021 Jun;89(6):483-498. doi: 10.1037/ccp0000655.
Justice-involved youth report high rates of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs; abuse, neglect, household dysfunction) and are at high risk for elevated behavioral health needs (i.e., substance use, psychiatric symptoms). Research with broad samples of adolescents shows ACEs predict behavioral health outcomes, yet most research on the impact of ACEs among justice-involved youth focuses on recidivism. The present study addresses this gap by examining the prospective association between ACEs and psychiatric symptoms, substance use, and substance-related problems (i.e., consequences of use) among first-time justice-involved youth.
First-time justice-involved youth (n = 271; 54.3% male; M age = 14.5 years; 43.5% Latinx; non-Latinx: 34.2% White, 8.6% Black, 7.1% Other, 6.7% Multiracial) and their caregivers were assessed at youth's first court contact and 4- and 12-month follow-ups. Youth and caregivers reported youth's exposure to ACEs through a series of instruments at baseline and 4-months (e.g., Childhood Trauma Questionnaire Short-Form; Traumatic Life Events Inventory). Primary outcomes included youth alcohol and cannabis use (Adolescent Risk Behavior Assessment), consequences of use (Brief Young Adult Alcohol Consequences Questionnaire; Brief Marijuana Consequences Scale), and psychiatric symptoms (Behavior Assessment System for Children; National Stressful Events Survey PTSD Short Scale).
Youth were exposed to three ACEs, on average, prior to first justice contact (M = 3). Exposure to more ACEs, particularly abuse, predicted substance use and psychiatric outcomes. Gender differences emerged for cannabis use and internalizing symptoms.
Implications for trauma-responsive juvenile justice reform are discussed, including screening for ACEs and their sequelae at first court contact and considering the role of masculine norms. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
有犯罪经历的青少年报告称,他们经历过较高水平的不良儿童经历(ACEs;虐待、忽视、家庭功能障碍),并且有较高的行为健康需求(即药物使用、精神症状)风险。对青少年的广泛样本研究表明,ACEs 预测行为健康结果,但大多数关于有犯罪经历的青少年中 ACEs 影响的研究都集中在累犯上。本研究通过检查首次有犯罪经历的青少年中 ACEs 与精神症状、药物使用以及与物质相关的问题(即使用后果)之间的前瞻性关联,弥补了这一空白。
首次有犯罪经历的青少年(n = 271;54.3%为男性;平均年龄 = 14.5 岁;43.5%为拉丁裔;非拉丁裔:34.2%为白人,8.6%为黑人,7.1%为其他,6.7%为多种族)及其照顾者在青少年首次法庭接触时以及 4 个月和 12 个月的随访中接受评估。青少年及其照顾者在基线和 4 个月时通过一系列工具报告青少年接触 ACEs 的情况(例如,儿童创伤问卷短表;创伤生活事件清单)。主要结果包括青少年的酒精和大麻使用情况(青少年风险行为评估)、使用后果(简短青少年酒精后果问卷;简短大麻后果量表)和精神症状(行为评估系统儿童版;国家压力事件调查 PTSD 短量表)。
青少年在首次接触司法系统之前平均经历了三种 ACEs(M = 3)。暴露于更多 ACEs,特别是虐待,预示着药物使用和精神健康结果。性别差异出现在大麻使用和内化症状上。
讨论了对创伤反应性少年司法改革的影响,包括在首次法庭接触时对 ACEs 及其后果进行筛查,并考虑到男性规范的作用。