Author:
CICCHETTI DANTE,ROGOSCH FRED A.
Abstract
Cortisol regulation was investigated in a sample of school-aged maltreated (n =
175) and demographically comparable low-income nonmaltreated (n = 209) children in
the context of a day camp research program. Overall group differences between maltreated and
nonmaltreated children were not found for average morning or average afternoon cortisol levels.
However, significant variations were found that were based on the subtypes of maltreatment that
the children had experienced. Maltreated children who had been both physically and sexually
abused (as well as neglected or emotionally maltreated) exhibited substantial elevations in
morning cortisol levels; children who had high (>1 SD) cortisol levels in both the
morning and afternoon were also overrepresented in the multiple abuse group. Developmental
timing of maltreatment did not account for these group differences, whereas the severity of sexual
abuse was implicated. In contrast to the multiple abuse group, a subgroup of physically abused
children showed evidence of a trend toward lower morning cortisol relative to nonmaltreated
children with a significantly smaller decrease in cortisol levels from morning to afternoon. The
findings are discussed in terms of the diversity of atypical cortisol regulation patterns that are
exhibited among maltreated children.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
357 articles.
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