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Indiana
Consortium For Mental Health |
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Abstract Reprint # 51: Poverty and Child Emotional and Behavioral Problems: Racial/Ethnic Differences in Processes and Effects* JANE D. MCLEOD, Indiana
University, JAMES M. NONNEMAKER, University of Minnesota
Using a sample of four to nine
Year-old children from the 1992 wave of the Children of the National
Longitudinal Surveys of Youth data set, we evaluated racial and ethnic
differences in the effects of current poverty and the persistence of
poverty on child emotional and behavioral problems, and in the variables
responsible for those effects. We considered three sets of variables in
the latter analysis-mother's early characteristics and behaviors;
correlated sociodemographic characteristics; and mediators (neighborhood
problems, mother's psychological resources, and characteristics of the
home environment)‑and evaluated their relevance across three
racial/ethnic subgroups (blacks, Hispanics, and non-Hispanic whites).
Consistent with our expectations, we observed a significantly stronger
effect of the persistence of poverty on child problems for whites than
for blacks, an effect that is attributable to the relatively strong
association between poverty and mother ~ prior history of delinquency
and current marital status among whites. The effect of poverty on child
problems was substantially explained for blacks by mother's early
self-esteem, whereas mediating processes took on greater relevance for
Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites. Our results support the conclusion
that there are racial/ethnic differences in the selection processes and
proximal conditions that are responsible for the diminished
psychological well-being of poor children.
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