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Adoptive Family Relationships and Healthy Adolescent Development: A Risk and Resilience Analysis

Adoptive Family Relationships and Healthy Adolescent Development: A Risk and Resilience Analysis This study used a risk and resilience perspective and the catch-up model of adoption to analyze data from the National Survey of Adoptive Parents for 701 adopted adolescents. Structural equation models showed that better parent-child relationship quality was significantly associated with reduced odds of skipping school, being suspended, and reporting substance abuse or police trouble, when demographic variables and the pre-placement abuse/neglect factor were controlled. Better parent-child relationships also were associated with better performance in language arts, but not in mathematics. In general, few differences in the pattern of significant relationships were observed for a transracial adoptee subset of adolescents. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Adoption Quarterly Taylor & Francis

Adoptive Family Relationships and Healthy Adolescent Development: A Risk and Resilience Analysis

Adoption Quarterly , Volume 13 (3-4): 18 – Nov 30, 2010
18 pages

Adoptive Family Relationships and Healthy Adolescent Development: A Risk and Resilience Analysis

Abstract

This study used a risk and resilience perspective and the catch-up model of adoption to analyze data from the National Survey of Adoptive Parents for 701 adopted adolescents. Structural equation models showed that better parent-child relationship quality was significantly associated with reduced odds of skipping school, being suspended, and reporting substance abuse or police trouble, when demographic variables and the pre-placement abuse/neglect factor were controlled. Better parent-child...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
Copyright Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
ISSN
1544-452X
eISSN
1092-6755
DOI
10.1080/10926755.2010.524873
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This study used a risk and resilience perspective and the catch-up model of adoption to analyze data from the National Survey of Adoptive Parents for 701 adopted adolescents. Structural equation models showed that better parent-child relationship quality was significantly associated with reduced odds of skipping school, being suspended, and reporting substance abuse or police trouble, when demographic variables and the pre-placement abuse/neglect factor were controlled. Better parent-child relationships also were associated with better performance in language arts, but not in mathematics. In general, few differences in the pattern of significant relationships were observed for a transracial adoptee subset of adolescents.

Journal

Adoption QuarterlyTaylor & Francis

Published: Nov 30, 2010

Keywords: adopted adolescents; adoptive family relationships; transracial adoption; parent-child relationship; structural equation modeling; latent variable interactions; adoption

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