Assessing Structural Models of Neighborhood and Family Sociodemographic Characteristics and Relations with Externalizing Psychopathology Público
King, Christopher (Summer 2022)
Abstract
Externalizing psychopathology in youth includes symptoms of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), conduct disorder (CD), and oppositional defiant disorder (ODD). Prior studies of youth externalizing find small associations with neighborhood sociodemographic characteristics and small-to-moderate associations with family sociodemographic characteristics. However, such studies generally use suboptimal operationalizations of neighborhood sociodemographic characteristics and broad externalizing psychopathology. Consequently, the relations between these variables may be misestimated. The current study 1) addresses these limitations with a latent variable modeling approach to characterize more optimal measurement models for externalizing, family sociodemographic, neighborhood sociodemographic, and neighborhood environment characteristics, and 2) assesses structural relations between these constructs. Using a population-representative, ethnically diverse sample of 2192 twins and siblings from the Georgia Twin Study and data from the National Neighborhood Data Archive and 2000 U.S. Census, I assessed the fit of competing measurement models for family sociodemographic, neighborhood sociodemographic, and neighborhood environment characteristics. In structural models, I regressed a general externalizing factor (comprising DSM-IV symptoms of ADHD, ODD, and CD) on the latent factors of family sociodemographic, neighborhood sociodemographic, and neighborhood environment characteristics. Family sociodemographic characteristics were associated with externalizing psychopathology (R2 = .01, b = -.079, SE = .038, p = .040), while neighborhood sociodemographic characteristics (R2 = .00, b = -.016, SE = .062, p = .800) and neighborhood environment (R2 = .00, b = .021, SE = .061, p = .734) were not. Family sociodemographic characteristics were associated with neighborhood sociodemographic characteristics (R2 = .13, b = -.354, SE = .068, p < 0.001) and neighborhood environment (R2 = .04, b = -.186, SE = .081, p = .022). Results align with prior work indicating family sociodemographic characteristics are associated with externalizing psychopathology. However, when accounting for family sociodemographic characteristics, these results do not support direct associations between neighborhood characteristics and broad externalizing psychopathology.
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
Method 9
Results 19
Discussion 24
References 31
Tables 43
Figures 49
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