Modrowski Crosby A, Chaplo Shannon D, Kerig Patricia K
Alpert Medical School of Brown University/Bradley Hasbro Children's Research Center 1 Hoppin Street, Suite 204, Providence, RI 02903.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute 105 Smith Level Road, Chapel Hill, NC 27516.
Child Youth Serv Rev. 2023 Jul;150. doi: 10.1016/j.childyouth.2023.106998. Epub 2023 May 6.
Recently, scholars have placed increasing effort on better understanding the unique needs of youth involved in both the child welfare and juvenile justice systems. This study drew from the Developmental Cascade of Multisystem Involvement Framework to examine group differences in trauma exposure, posttraumatic stress symptoms, and offending among youth solely involved in the juvenile justice system and youth with varying degrees of dual-system involvement, including crossover youth (i.e., youth with a history of maltreatment and offending regardless of system involvement), dual-contact youth (i.e., youth who had a history of a substantiated CW maltreatment petition prior to their involvement in the current study), and dually-involved youth (i.e., youth under the care and custody of the state's child welfare system at the time of study participation). Four-hundred adolescents (25% girls, age = 15.97) who were recruited from a detention center and completed self-report measures assessing trauma exposure, posttraumatic stress, and offending. Juvenile justice and child welfare records also were collected. Results indicated that, compared to youth solely involved in the juvenile justice system, crossover youth reported significantly more exposure to traumatic events, more severe posttraumatic stress symptoms, and more self-reported offending. In contrast, results indicated few differences between dual-contact youth and youth solely involved in the juvenile justice system; these groups only differed in age and in recidivism charges. There also were few differences between dually-involved youth and youth solely involved in the juvenile justice system; these groups only differed in age and exposure to non-Criterion A traumatic events. The current results suggest that categorizing youth as crossover youth based on their own self-reported history of child maltreatment exposure resulted in more observed differences between dual-system youth and youth solely involved in juvenile justice. The present results have valuable implications for how we operationalize youth's system involvement and highlight the importance of examining child maltreatment as a point of prevention and intervention efforts for these youth.
最近,学者们越来越致力于更好地了解同时涉及儿童福利和少年司法系统的青少年的独特需求。本研究借鉴了多系统参与发展级联框架,以检验仅参与少年司法系统的青少年与具有不同程度双系统参与的青少年(包括交叉青少年,即有虐待和犯罪史、不论是否涉及系统的青少年)、双接触青少年(即在参与本研究之前有一份经证实的儿童福利虐待申诉记录的青少年)和双重参与青少年(即在研究参与时处于该州儿童福利系统照料和监护之下的青少年)在创伤暴露、创伤后应激症状和犯罪方面的群体差异。从一个拘留中心招募了400名青少年(25%为女孩,年龄 = 15.97岁),他们完成了评估创伤暴露、创伤后应激和犯罪情况的自我报告测量。还收集了少年司法和儿童福利记录。结果表明,与仅参与少年司法系统的青少年相比,交叉青少年报告的创伤事件暴露更多、创伤后应激症状更严重,且自我报告的犯罪行为更多。相比之下,结果表明双接触青少年与仅参与少年司法系统的青少年之间差异不大;这些群体仅在年龄和累犯指控方面存在差异。双重参与青少年与仅参与少年司法系统的青少年之间也几乎没有差异;这些群体仅在年龄和非A类创伤事件暴露方面存在差异。当前结果表明,根据青少年自己报告的儿童虐待暴露史将其归类为交叉青少年,会导致双系统青少年与仅参与少年司法系统的青少年之间出现更多可观察到的差异。本研究结果对于我们如何界定青少年的系统参与具有重要意义,并突出了将儿童虐待作为这些青少年预防和干预工作重点进行研究的重要性。