A longitudinal analysis of the indirect effect of violence exposure on future orientation through perceived stress and the buffering effect of family participation

CJ Schmidt, MA Zimmerman… - American journal of …, 2018 - Wiley Online Library
American journal of community psychology, 2018Wiley Online Library
Exposure to violence (ETV) during adolescence has been associated with negative effects
in later life, and may negatively affect an individual's future orientation. Future orientation
has important health implications and warrants being studied. Yet, few researchers have
examined how ETV affects an individual's future orientation as a young adult. The purpose
of this study was to examine the indirect effect of ETV during adolescence on future
orientation as a young adult through perceived stress. We also tested the moderating effect …
Abstract
Exposure to violence (ETV) during adolescence has been associated with negative effects in later life, and may negatively affect an individual's future orientation. Future orientation has important health implications and warrants being studied. Yet, few researchers have examined how ETV affects an individual's future orientation as a young adult. The purpose of this study was to examine the indirect effect of ETV during adolescence on future orientation as a young adult through perceived stress. We also tested the moderating effect of family participation on the relationship between perceived stress and future orientation. Longitudinal data from a sample of 316 African American participants (42.10% male and 57.90% female, Mage = 14.76 at Wave 1) from low socioeconomic backgrounds recruited from a Midwestern school district were used in the analysis. Multigroup structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to test our hypotheses. Our findings indicated that greater ETV during adolescence is associated with higher levels of perceived stress and, in turn, a more negative outlook on one's future as a young adult. This indirect effect occurred for individuals with lower family participation, but was not evident for individuals with greater family participation. These findings provide important implications for youth development interventions.
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