We found a match
Your institution may have rights to this item. Sign in to continue.
- Title
Impact of housing instability on child behavior at age 7 years.
- Authors
Gaylord, Abigail L.; Cowell, Whitney J.; Hoepner, Lori A.; Perera, Frederica P.; Rauh, Virginia A.; Herbstman, Julie B.
- Abstract
Housing instability is thought to be a major influence on children's healthy growth and development. However, little is known about the factors that influence housing instability, limiting the identification of effective interventions. The goals of this study were to 1) explore factors, including material hardship, satisfaction with living conditions and housing disrepair, that predict housing instability (total number of moves that a child experienced in the first seven years of life); and 2) examine the relationship between housing instability and child behavior at age 7 years, measured by the Child Behavior Checklist. We analyzed these associations among children enrolled in the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health (CCCEH) Mothers and Newborns study. In our analysis, we found that housing disrepair predicted residential change after three years of age, but not before. Persistent material hardship over the seven-year time period from pregnancy through age 7 years was associated with increased number of moves. Children who experienced more than three moves had significantly more thought- and attention-related problems compared to children who experienced fewer than three moves over the same time period. Children who experienced more than three moves also had higher total and internalizing problem behavior scores, although these differences were not statistically significant. We conclude that housing instability is associated with problem behavior related to thought and attention in early childhood and that interventions to reduce socioeconomic strain may have the greatest impact in breaking the cycle of children's environmental health disparities related to housing instability.
- Subjects
BLACK people; CHILD Behavior Checklist; CHILD development; CHILD behavior; HOUSING; INTERVIEWING; LONGITUDINAL method; RESEARCH methodology; PREGNANCY &; psychology; LOGISTIC regression analysis; SOCIOECONOMIC factors; STRUCTURAL equation modeling; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; ODDS ratio; PSYCHOLOGY
- Publication
International Public Health Journal, 2018, Vol 10, Issue 4, p287
- ISSN
1947-4989
- Publication type
Article