Bidirectional Associations of Mental Health with Self-Reported Criminal Offending Over Time for At-Risk Early Adult Men in the USA.

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q2 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Margit Wiesner, Deborah M Capaldi, David C R Kerr, Weiwei Wu
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Abstract

Criminal offending and mental health problems often co-occur. This study examined competing models to understand bidirectional associations between crime and mental health problems over time among at-risk men in the U.S. It was hypothesized that there would be significant cross-lagged associations of offending and mental health problems in early adulthood. Longitudinal data were drawn from 206 at-risk men enrolled in the Oregon Youth Study. Random intercept cross-lagged models examined bidirectional associations between mental health problems (assessed with the 53-item Brief Symptom Inventory) and self-reported offending in early adulthood across 6 time points from ages 19-20 to 29-30 years. Sociodemographic factors, prior levels, and common risk factors (i.e., parents' criminality, mental health problems, and socioeconomic status, as well as child age, antisocial propensity, and internalizing behaviors) were controlled during analysis. A robust association between mental health problems and offending was found for the early adult period, especially for total and violence offenses. Findings did not support the hypothesized positive cross-lagged effects. Instead, two cross-lagged effects emerged indicating that offending was inversely related to subsequent mental health problems. Childhood antisocial propensity and internalizing behaviors emerged as important predictors of stable between-person level differences in offending and mental health problems, respectively, although results differed as a function of offense categories (total, violence, property, drug). Findings indicate that the relation between mental health problems and offending is unidirectional, temporal, and partially spurious. Preventing child internalizing behaviors and child antisocial behaviors holds promise for reducing early adult mental health problems and offending.

Abstract Image

美国高危早期成年男性心理健康与自我报告的犯罪行为的双向关联
刑事犯罪和心理健康问题经常同时发生。本研究通过竞争模型来了解美国高危男性犯罪与心理健康问题之间随着时间推移而产生的双向关联。研究假设,在成年早期,犯罪与心理健康问题之间会存在显著的交叉滞后关联。纵向数据来自俄勒冈青年研究(Oregon Youth Study)中的 206 名高风险男性。随机截距交叉滞后模型检验了心理健康问题(用 53 项简明症状量表评估)与自我报告的成年早期犯罪之间在 19-20 岁至 29-30 岁 6 个时间点的双向关联。在分析过程中,对社会人口学因素、先前水平和常见风险因素(即父母犯罪、心理健康问题和社会经济地位,以及儿童年龄、反社会倾向和内化行为)进行了控制。研究发现,在成年早期,心理健康问题与犯罪之间存在密切联系,尤其是在总体犯罪和暴力犯罪方面。研究结果并不支持假设的正向交叉滞后效应。相反,两个交叉滞后效应的出现表明,犯罪与随后的心理健康问题成反比关系。童年时期的反社会倾向和内化行为分别成为预测犯罪和心理健康问题的稳定的人际水平差异的重要因素,尽管结果因犯罪类别(总犯罪、暴力犯罪、财产犯罪、毒品犯罪)的不同而不同。研究结果表明,心理健康问题与犯罪之间的关系是单向的、时间性的和部分虚假的。预防儿童内化行为和儿童反社会行为有望减少成人早期的心理健康问题和犯罪。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
10.50%
发文量
28
期刊介绍: The Journal of Developmental and Life Course Criminology seeks to advance knowledge and understanding of developmental dimensions of offending across the life-course.  Research that examines current theories, debates, and knowledge gaps within Developmental and Life Course Criminology is encouraged.  The journal welcomes theoretical papers, empirical papers, and papers that explore the translation of developmental and life-course research into policy and/or practice.  Papers that present original research or explore new directions for examination are also encouraged.   The journal also welcomes all rigorous methodological approaches and orientations.  The Journal of Developmental and Life Course Criminology encourages submissions from a broad array of related disciplines including but not limited to psychology, statistics, sociology, psychiatry, neuroscience, geography, political science, history, social work, epidemiology, public health, and economics.
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