Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4168400 The Journal of Pediatrics 2007 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo evaluate the long-term impact of adolescent dating violence (ADV) on behavioral and psychological health.Study designFrom a diverse sample of older adolescents who completed Project EAT in 1999 (wave 1) and 2004 (wave 2; mean age 20.4), 23 male and 102 female adolescents reporting ADV were compared with 671 male and 720 female adolescents reporting no ADV.ResultsADV was positively associated with cigarette smoking and suicide attempts for both sexes, binge-eating and suicidal ideation in male adolescents, and smoking marijuana and high depressive symptoms in female adolescents in analyses unadjusted for wave 1 outcomes. In analyses adjusted for wave 1, in female adolescents, ADV was significantly associated with smoking cigarettes, marijuana use, and high depressive symptoms and marginally associated with suicide attempts; in male adolescents, ADV was significantly associated with smoking cigarettes and marginally associated with binge-eating and suicidal ideation. ADV was significantly associated with an overall high-risk profile (presence ≥3 health outcomes) for both sexes; results remained significant in female adolescents after adjusting for wave 1.ConclusionsADV is associated with greater likelihood of problematic health factors and increases nonspecific risk toward behavioral and psychological impairment in youth, particularly female adolescents.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Perinatology, Pediatrics and Child Health
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