By adolescence, appraisal of one's past life experience
becomes critical to the stage-salient issue of identity
formation. This study examined adolescents' perceptions of their
maltreatment experiences. It scrutinized the combined and unique
contribution of five maltreatment types (i.e., physical abuse, sexual
abuse, psychological abuse, neglect, and exposure to family violence)
to variance in adolescent adjustment. It was predicted that these
maltreatment types would account for significant variance in
adjustment when controlling for the context variables of age, sex,
socioeconomic status, IQ, and stressful life events. Adolescents
(N = 160, aged 11–17) were randomly selected from the
open caseload of a child protection agency. Participants completed
global severity ratings regarding their experiences of the five types
of maltreatment, as well as a battery of measures assessing self- and
caretaker-reported externalizing and internalizing symptomatology. The
youths' maltreatment ratings significantly predicted
self-reported adjustment, even when controlling for all context
variables. Psychological maltreatment was the most predictively potent
maltreatment type, and enhanced the predictive utility of other
maltreatment types. Significant sex differences in the sequelae of
perceived maltreatment were evident. Also, interactions between
youths' ratings and those obtained from CPS files were
detected. The findings were consistent with recent research in child
maltreatment, and contribute to our understanding of developmental
psychopathology among adolescents.
This study examines the impact of exposure to family violence on school-aged boys. Boys who had witnessed violence between their parents were compared to boys who had been abused by their parents. The findings indicate that boys exposed to violence had a pattern of adjustment problems similar to those of abused boys and significantly different in severity and type from those of a community comparison group.
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