Relationships between parental mental illness and/or offending and offspring contact with the police in childhood: Findings from a longitudinal record-linkage study

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q3 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health Pub Date : 2023-01-22 DOI:10.1002/cbm.2274
Ulrika Athanassiou, Melissa J. Green, Stacy Tzoumakis, Tyson Whitten, Kristin R. Laurens, Felicity Harris, Vaughan J. Carr, Kimberlie Dean
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Abstract

Background

Parental offending and mental illness are associated with an increased risk of criminal behaviour in offspring during adolescence and adulthood, but the impact of such problems on younger children, including children's experiences of victimisation, is less well known.

Aim

To investigate the associations between parental offending and mental illness recorded prior to their offspring's age of 5 years and their offspring's contact with police as a ‘person of interest’, ‘victim’ or ‘witness’ between ages 5 and 13 years.

Methods

Our sample consisted of 72,771 children and their parents drawn from the New South Wales Child Development Study, an Australian longitudinal population-based record linkage study. Logistic regression analyses were conducted to examine associations between parental factors and offspring's police contact. Separate models examined the relationships between maternal or paternal offending and mental illness, as well as the combination among either or both parents, as the independent variables, and their child's police contact as the dependent variable.

Results

Parental offending and mental illness were each individually associated with indices of police contact among offspring. Stronger associations were observed when both offending and mental illness were present together (in either parent, or when one parent had both exposures). Stronger associations were evident for mothers with both factors across all offspring police contact types, relative to fathers with both factors, in fully adjusted models; that is, children of mothers with both factors were over four times as likely to have contact with police as a ‘person of interest’ (OR = 4.29; 95% CI = 3.75–4.92) and over three times as likely to have contact as a victim (OR = 3.35; 95% CI = 3.01–3.74) or witness (OR = 3.58; 95% CI = 3.03–4.24), than children whose mothers had no history of offending or mental illness.

Conclusions

Children with a parental history of offending and mental illness in early life are at an increased likelihood of early police contact as young as 5–13 years of age; it is vital that this is taken as a signal to help them and their affected families according to need.

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父母精神疾病和/或犯罪与子女童年与警察接触之间的关系:一项纵向记录联系研究的结果
父母的犯罪行为和精神疾病与后代在青春期和成年期犯罪行为的风险增加有关,但这些问题对年幼儿童的影响,包括儿童的受害经历,却鲜为人知。目的调查父母犯罪与子女5岁前的精神疾病记录之间的关系,以及子女在5至13岁期间作为“利害关系人”、“受害者”或“证人”与警察接触的关系。我们的样本包括来自新南威尔士州儿童发展研究的72,771名儿童及其父母,这是一项澳大利亚基于人口的纵向记录联系研究。采用Logistic回归分析来检验父母因素与子女警察接触之间的关系。单独的模型检验了母亲或父亲的犯罪与精神疾病之间的关系,以及父母一方或双方的结合,作为自变量,而他们的孩子的警察联系作为因变量。结果父母犯罪和精神疾病分别与子女的警察接触指数相关。当犯罪和精神疾病同时出现时(父母中的任何一方,或者父母中的一方同时出现),观察到更强的关联。在完全调整后的模型中,具有这两种因素的母亲与具有这两种因素的父亲相比,在所有后代警察接触类型中具有更强的相关性;也就是说,有这两种因素的母亲的孩子作为“感兴趣的人”与警察接触的可能性是其四倍多(OR = 4.29;95% CI = 3.75-4.92),与受害者接触的可能性是受害者的三倍多(OR = 3.35;95% CI = 3.01-3.74)或证人(or = 3.58;95% CI = 3.03-4.24),比母亲无犯罪史或无精神疾病的儿童高。结论:父母早期有犯罪史和精神疾病史的儿童在5-13岁早期接触警察的可能性增加;至关重要的是,这被视为一个信号,根据需要帮助他们及其受影响的家庭。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: Criminal Behaviour & Mental Health – CBMH – aims to publish original material on any aspect of the relationship between mental state and criminal behaviour. Thus, we are interested in mental mechanisms associated with offending, regardless of whether the individual concerned has a mental disorder or not. We are interested in factors that influence such relationships, and particularly welcome studies about pathways into and out of crime. These will include studies of normal and abnormal development, of mental disorder and how that may lead to offending for a subgroup of sufferers, together with information about factors which mediate such a relationship.
期刊最新文献
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