邻里搬迁对弱势家庭青少年心理健康的不同影响:随机试验的结果。

Theresa L Osypuk, Eric J Tchetgen Tchetgen, Dolores Acevedo-Garcia, Felton J Earls, Alisa Lincoln, Nicole M Schmidt, M Maria Glymour
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景 大量观察证据表明,生活在贫困社区的青少年心理健康状况不佳,但并非所有儿童都会受到类似的影响。目标 利用实验证据评估性别和家庭健康问题是否会改变从高贫困社区搬迁到低贫困社区对心理健康的影响。设计 随机对照试验。地点 1994-1997 年间美国 5 个城市公共住房中的低收入家庭志愿者。参与者 我们对 "向机会迁移研究 "中 12 至 19 岁青少年(n = 2829,有效响应率 89%)的 4 至 7 年结果进行了分析。干预:随机分配家庭留在公共住房(对照组)或接受政府资助的租房补贴搬入私人公寓(实验组)。意向治疗分析包括按性别和健康脆弱性(定义为随机化前家庭成员的健康/发育限制或残疾)进行的干预互动。主要结果测量 过去一年的心理困扰(凯斯勒 6 级量表 [K6])和行为问题指数 (BPI)。补充分析使用了过去一年的重度抑郁障碍(MDD)。结果 男性性别(P = 0.02)和家庭健康脆弱性(P = 0.002)对 K6 评分的干预效果有显著的负面影响;男性性别(P = 0.01)对 BPI 的干预效果有显著的负面影响,但健康脆弱性(P = 0.17)对其影响不大。没有基线健康脆弱性的女孩是唯一在任何结果上受益的亚组(K6:β = -0.21;95% CI,-0.34 至 -0.07;P = .003;MDD:几率比 = 0.42;95% CI,0.20 至 0.85;P = .02)。对于健康脆弱的男孩,干预与 K6(β = 0.26;95% CI,0.09 至 0.44;P = .003)和 BPI(β = 0.24;95% CI,0.09 至 0.40;P = .002)值的下降有关。有健康脆弱性的女孩和没有健康脆弱性的男孩都没有从干预中受益。对坚持治疗进行调整后的工具变量分析发现,干预效果是原来的两倍。多发性抑郁症的模式与此类似,但由于发病率较低,估计值并不精确。结论 尽管一些女孩从中受益,但来自有健康问题家庭的男孩和青少年并没有从住房流动政策中获得心理健康方面的益处,他们可能需要额外的项目支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Differential mental health effects of neighborhood relocation among youth in vulnerable families: results from a randomized trial.

CONTEXT Extensive observational evidence indicates that youth in high-poverty neighborhoods exhibit poor mental health, although not all children may be affected similarly. OBJECTIVE To use experimental evidence to assess whether gender and family health problems modify the mental health effects of moving from high- to low-poverty neighborhoods. DESIGN Randomized controlled trial. SETTING Volunteer low-income families in public housing in 5 US cities between 1994-1997. PARTICIPANTS We analyze 4- to 7-year outcomes in youth aged 12 to 19 years (n = 2829, 89% effective response rate) in the Moving to Opportunity Study. INTERVENTION Families were randomized to remain in public housing (control group) or to receive government-funded rental subsidies to move into private apartments (experimental group). Intention-to-treat analyses included intervention interactions by gender and health vulnerability (defined as prerandomization health/developmental limitations or disabilities in family members). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Past-year psychological distress (Kessler 6 scale [K6]) and the Behavioral Problems Index (BPI). Supplemental analyses used past-year major depressive disorder (MDD). RESULTS Male gender (P = .02) and family health vulnerability (P = .002) significantly adversely modified the intervention effect on K6 scores; male gender (P = .01), but not health vulnerability (P = .17), significantly adversely modified the intervention effect on the BPI. Girls without baseline health vulnerabilities were the only subgroup to benefit on any outcome (K6: β = -0.21; 95% CI, -0.34 to -0.07; P = .003; MDD: odds ratio = 0.42; 95% CI, 0.20 to 0.85; P = .02). For boys with health vulnerabilities, intervention was associated with worse K6 (β = 0.26; 95% CI, 0.09 to 0.44; P = .003) and BPI (β = 0.24; 95% CI, 0.09 to 0.40; P = .002) values. Neither girls with health vulnerability nor boys without health vulnerability experienced intervention benefits. Adherence-adjusted instrumental variable analysis found intervention effects twice as large. Patterns were similar for MDD, but estimates were imprecise owing to low prevalence. CONCLUSIONS Although some girls benefited, boys and adolescents from families with baseline health problems did not experience mental health benefits from housing mobility policies and may need additional program supports.

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Archives of general psychiatry
Archives of general psychiatry 医学-精神病学
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