不平等的社区,不平等的技能:适应性功能和获得社区资源的途径。

IF 2.6 4区 心理学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Allison E Gornik, Christina E Love, Alison E Pritchard, Rebecca W Lieb, Lisa A Jacobson, Rowena Ng, Rachel K Peterson, Luther G Kalb
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:研究儿童适应功能与社区资源(如学校质量、获得健康食品、绿色空间和住房质量)之间的关系,采用大量不同的临床门诊样本。方法:儿科门诊患者6,942例;年龄M = 10.44岁;男性67.0%;50.3%的白人;33.9% Medicaid),年龄1-18岁,接受神经心理学或心理评估,如果他们的照顾者完成了适应行为评估系统,第三版(ABAS-3),并有国家规范的儿童机会指数(COI)得分,这是一个29个地理编码社区特征的综合测量。结果:来自高机会社区的儿童在概念、社会和实践领域表现出更强的适应功能。邻里优势排名前40%的人比排名后60%的人表现出更强的适应能力。社区资源和家庭经济资源与儿童年龄、性别和种族/民族背景之外的更强的适应技能有关。结论:社区资源与儿童的适应功能有关,可能是由于在更安全、更支持性的环境中增加了练习这些技能的机会。这些调查结果强调了在评估适应技能时考虑环境因素的重要性,并强调了公共卫生投资和与社区资源有关的立法的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Unequal neighborhoods, unequal skills: Adaptive functioning and access to community resources.

Objective: To examine the relationship between children's adaptive functioning and neighborhood resources - such as school quality, access to healthy food, green spaces, and housing quality - using a large, diverse clinical outpatient sample.

Method: Pediatric outpatients (N = 6,942; age M = 10.44 years; 67.0% male; 50.3% White; 33.9% Medicaid), aged 1-18, who underwent neuropsychological or psychological evaluation were included if their caregiver completed the Adaptive Behavior Assessment System, 3rd Edition (ABAS-3) and had a nationally normed Child Opportunity Index (COI) score, a composite measure of 29 geo-coded neighborhood characteristics.

Results: Children from higher-opportunity neighborhoods demonstrated significantly stronger adaptive functioning across conceptual, social, and practical domains. Those in the top 40% of neighborhood advantage exhibited stronger adaptive skills than those in the bottom 60%. Neighborhood resources and family financial resources were associated with greater adaptive skills beyond child age, sex, and racial/ethnic background.

Conclusion: Neighborhood resources are linked to children's adaptive functioning, possibly due to increased opportunities to practice these skills in safer, more supportive environments. These findings emphasize the importance of considering environmental factors in assessing adaptive skills and highlight the need for public health investments and legislation related to community resources.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
3.80%
发文量
185
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society is the official journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, an organization of over 4,500 international members from a variety of disciplines. The Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society welcomes original, creative, high quality research papers covering all areas of neuropsychology. The focus of articles may be primarily experimental, applied, or clinical. Contributions will broadly reflect the interest of all areas of neuropsychology, including but not limited to: development of cognitive processes, brain-behavior relationships, adult and pediatric neuropsychology, neurobehavioral syndromes (such as aphasia or apraxia), and the interfaces of neuropsychology with related areas such as behavioral neurology, neuropsychiatry, genetics, and cognitive neuroscience. Papers that utilize behavioral, neuroimaging, and electrophysiological measures are appropriate. To assure maximum flexibility and to promote diverse mechanisms of scholarly communication, the following formats are available in addition to a Regular Research Article: Brief Communication is a shorter research article; Rapid Communication is intended for "fast breaking" new work that does not yet justify a full length article and is placed on a fast review track; Case Report is a theoretically important and unique case study; Critical Review and Short Review are thoughtful considerations of topics of importance to neuropsychology and include meta-analyses; Dialogue provides a forum for publishing two distinct positions on controversial issues in a point-counterpoint format; Special Issue and Special Section consist of several articles linked thematically; Letter to the Editor responds to recent articles published in the Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society; and Book Review, which is considered but is no longer solicited.
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