520 likes | 837 Views
Time trends in family risks and their impact. Stephan Collishaw & Barbara Maughan MRC SGDP Centre Institute of Psychiatry King’s College London. Time trends in family risks. Recent decades Marked changes in family demographics age at marriage / cohabitation age at birth of first child
E N D
Time trends in family risks and their impact Stephan Collishaw & Barbara Maughan MRC SGDP Centre Institute of Psychiatry King’s College London
Time trends in family risks Recent decades • Marked changes in family demographics • age at marriage / cohabitation • age at birth of first child • family size • partnership stability / breakdown • complexity of family forms • Increases in psychosocial disorders among young people
Time trends in adolescent conduct problems1974-1999 Collishaw et al, 2004
Questions • do changing family patterns ‘explain’ trends in child outcomes? • do the same risk factors contribute to • individual differencesin behaviour problems? • overall levelsof behaviour problems? • does theimpactof family risks change when their prevalence changes?
Divorce rate per 1,000 married population1961-1999 (England & Wales) ONS Population Trends 102, 2000 &Social Trends 20, 1990
Hypothesis • increasing prevalence of divorce associated with reduction in impact • pre-divorce ‘selection’ effects • less troubled families • less parental discord • post-divorce consequences • less social stigma • increased awareness of impact for children
Parental divorce and child outcomesmeta analysis (Amato, 2001) Decade of publication
Parental divorce and child outcomesmeta analysis (Amato, 2001) Decade of publication
Possible explanations • change in nature of marital dissolution • ‘low discord’ divorce especially distressing for children • increasing gap in economic well-being • single-parent families not benefited from economic expansion
Aims • update picture to include more recent cohort • examine 3 family indicators • family type • family income • family size • explore changes in prevalence and impact • illustrate changes in correlates • test how far changing family risks ‘account for’ rising levels of conduct problems
Samples Age 16
Measures Family-based correlates Family type (single vs. step vs. intact) Family income (<60% median vs. remainder) Family size (4+ children vs. 1-3 children) Adolescent conduct problems fighting bullying stealing lying disobedience
Divorce rate per 1,000 married population1961-1999 (England & Wales) Cohort 3 Cohort 2 Cohort 1 ONS Population Trends 102, 2000 &Social Trends 20, 1990
Proportion of families in poverty: Single parent vs. intact families Single Intact
Increasing income-inequality: single parent vs. intact families OR = 8.5 Single Intact
Increasing income-inequality: single parent vs. intact families OR = 8.5 OR = 10.1 Single Intact
Increasing income-inequality: single parent vs. intact families OR = 8.5 OR = 10.1 OR = 19.4 Single Intact
Family type and conduct problems by cohort OR = 1.9 Family type
Family type and conduct problems by cohort OR = 2.1 OR = 1.9 Family type
Family type and conduct problems by cohort OR = 1.8 OR = 2.1 OR = 1.9 Family type
Family type and conduct problems by cohort OR = 2.7 Family type
Family type and conduct problems by cohort OR = 2.2 OR = 2.7 Family type
Family type and conduct problems by cohort OR = 1.6 OR = 2.2 OR = 2.7 Family type
Summary: family type Risk factor Exposure ‘Impact’ Single parent family Up No change Step family Up Down?
Absolute household disposable income in the UK (1974-1999) Social Trends, 2002
“Relative poverty” in the UK (1974-1999) Social Trends, 2006
‘Relative poverty’ and conduct problems by cohort Low income OR = 1.4
‘Relative poverty’ and conduct problems by cohort OR = 2.1 Low income OR = 1.4
‘Relative poverty’ and conduct problems by cohort OR = 1.7 OR = 2.1 Low income OR = 1.4
Family size and conduct problems by cohort OR = 3.0 N children
Family size and conduct problems by cohort OR = 2.3 OR = 3.0 N children
Family size and conduct problems by cohort OR = 1.8 OR = 2.3 OR = 3.0 N children
Summary of findings up to now Risk factor Exposure ‘Impact’ Single parent family Up No change Step family Up Down? ‘Relative poverty’ No change Up Large family size Down Down
Conduct problems: high scores Total OR = 1.56 per cohort
What contributes to time trends in conduct problems?
What contributes to time trends in conduct problems?
What contributes to time trends in conduct problems?
What contributes to time trends in conduct problems?
Some conclusions • 1. Parallel trends in risks and outcomes do not imply a causal link • Increase in divorce rate over the past 30 years • Increase in conduct problems over the same time period • However, trends in family type appear largely independent of trends in conduct problems
Some conclusions • 2. Correlates of risk factors may change over time • E.g. Amato • Only had limited data with which to look at this • Socio-economic disadvantage even more strongly associated with single parenthood in more recent cohorts
Some conclusions • 3. Implication: changes in impact of a risk factor as important as changes in exposure • Focus on changes in exposure insufficient • Also need to consider possible change in association between risk and outcome • E.g. 1: family type and conduct problems; impact the same or reduced over time • E.g. 2: relative poverty and conduct problems; impact gone up over time
Some conclusions. • 4. Different explanatory models needed for understanding individual differences and level differences • Family type, income and size all associated with CP at individual level • But, trends in these aspects of family life only made modest contribution to understanding of level differences • Different factors may be relevant for the two