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ARTICLEARTICLE

Psychological Distress for African-American Adolescent Males: Exposure to Community Violence and Social Support as Factors

Paxton, K. C., Robinson, W. L., Shah, S., & Schoeny, M. E.
2004


This article was published in, and the following abstract copied from, Child Psychiatry & Human Development.

This study examined exposure to community violence and depressive and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms within a non-random sample of low-income, African-American male adolescents. The moderating effect of social support on these relationships was also examined. Seventy-seven African-American adolescent males were recruited from an inner-city, Midwestern high school and surveyed on exposure to violence, depression, post-traumatic stress, and social support. Regression analyses revealed that exposure to violence was significantly associated with both depressive and PTSD symptoms. However, social support was not found to moderate the relationship between exposure to community violence and psychological distress. Implications for intervention are discussed.

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Related

Reports

  • Adaptive Coping Reduces the Impact of Community Violence Exposure on Violent Behavior among African American and Latino Male Adolescents
  • The Relation of Antisocial Behavior Patterns and Changes in Internalizing Symptoms for a Sample of Inner-City Youth: Comorbidity within a Developmental Framework

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