Author:
DEATER–DECKARD KIRBY,DODGE KENNETH A.,BATES JOHN E.,PETTIT GREGORY S.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to test whether individual risk factors as well as the number of risk
factors (cumulative risk) predicted children's externalizing behaviors over middle
childhood. A sample of 466 European American and 100 African American boys and girls from
a broad range of socioeconomic levels was followed from age 5 to 10 years. Twenty risk
variables from four domains (child, sociocultural, parenting, and peer-related) were measured
using in-home interviews at the beginning of the study, and annual assessments of externalizing
behaviors were conducted. Consistent with past research, individual differences in externalizing
behavior problems were stable over time and were related to individual risk factors as well as the
number of risk factors present. Particular risks accounted for 36% to 45% of the variance, and the
number of risks present (cumulative risk status) accounted for 19% to 32% of the variance, in
externalizing outcomes. Cumulative risk was related to subsequent externalizing even after initial
levels of externalizing had been statistically controlled. All four domains of risk variables made
significant unique contributions to this statistical prediction, and there were multiple clusters of
risks that led to similar outcomes. There was also evidence that this prediction was moderated by
ethnic group status, most of the prediction of externalizing being found for European American
children. However, this moderation effect varied depending on the predictor and outcome
variables included in the model.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
523 articles.
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