Faculty of Psychology, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China; Mount Sinai Adolescent Health Center, Department of Pediatrics, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Environmental Medicine and Public Health, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2023 Oct;334:116220. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2023.116220. Epub 2023 Sep 4.
Early pubertal timing is associated with youth mental health problems, with association amplified or mitigated by characteristics of the residential neighborhood. Yet, limited research simultaneously examines the roles of neighborhood context and biological sex in this association. This study fills this research gap by examining sex-specific associations between pubertal timing and neighborhood income with youth mental health problems (internalizing and externalizing symptoms) in a longitudinal cohort of early adolescents in the United States (US). Participants were 9201 youth aged 9 or 10 years from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study. Pubertal timing was the average of parent- and youth-reported pubertal status standardized within sex and age. Outcome variables were youths' internalizing and externalizing symptoms assessed at 1-year follow-up via parent survey. We evaluated interaction effects between pubertal timing and neighborhood income in a series of sex-stratified linear mixed effect models, adjusted for family and personal sociodemographic characteristics. In girls, earlier pubertal timing was associated with more internalizing (β = 0.06, p < 0.001) and externalizing problems (β = 0.07, p < 0.001) at 1-year follow-up, not moderated by neighborhood income. In boys, earlier pubertal timing was associated with more externalizing problems among youth living in high-income neighborhoods, but not among those in low-income neighborhoods (interaction-p = 0.006). Results suggest that pubertal timing may affect youth mental health differentially in boys and girls, depending on the neighborhood contexts. These findings highlight the importance of both biological and social forces in shaping adolescent mental health and, thus, have public health and clinical implications for health promotion.
青春期提前与青少年心理健康问题有关,这种关联会因居住环境的特点而放大或减轻。然而,有限的研究同时考察了邻里环境和生物性别在这种关联中的作用。本研究通过在美国一项青少年纵向队列研究中,同时考察了青春期提前和邻里收入与青少年心理健康问题(内化和外化症状)之间的性别特异性关联,填补了这一研究空白。研究参与者为来自青少年大脑认知发育研究的 9201 名 9 或 10 岁的青少年。青春期提前是父母和青少年报告的青春期状态的平均值,在性别和年龄内进行了标准化。结果变量是青少年在 1 年随访时通过父母调查评估的内化和外化症状。我们在一系列按性别分层的线性混合效应模型中评估了青春期提前和邻里收入之间的交互效应,并根据家庭和个人社会人口统计学特征进行了调整。在女孩中,更早的青春期提前与 1 年随访时更多的内化问题(β=0.06,p<0.001)和外化问题(β=0.07,p<0.001)相关,而与邻里收入无关。在男孩中,更早的青春期提前与居住在高收入社区的青少年的更多外化问题相关,但与居住在低收入社区的青少年无关(交互作用 p=0.006)。结果表明,青春期提前可能会根据邻里环境的不同,对男孩和女孩的青少年心理健康产生不同的影响。这些发现强调了生物和社会力量在塑造青少年心理健康方面的重要性,因此对促进健康具有公共卫生和临床意义。