Exploring the association of Indigeneity, social adversity status and externalizing symptoms in children and adolescents

Alasdair Vance, Janet McGaw, Angel O’Meara, Joseph P Gone, Sandra Eades
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Abstract

Objective:The relationship between Indigeneity, social adversity status and externalizing symptoms is complex and unclear. This study investigates how Indigeneity, social adversity status and externalizing symptoms are related in young people.Methods:A total of 132 Indigenous and 247 non-Indigenous young people aged 6–16 years were recruited from a hospital mental health outpatient service. Normality plots with statistics for social adversity status and parent-reported externalizing symptoms were completed for the two groups, matched for age, gender, mental disorder symptom severity, symptom-linked distress and impairment. Standard multiple regression was used to examine how Indigeneity moderates the relationship between social adversity status and parent-reported externalizing symptoms. A scatterplot investigated the association between Indigeneity and social adversity status in young people with parent-reported externalizing symptoms.Results:The distributions of the two groups and (1) social adversity status and (2) parent -reported externalizing symptoms were non-normal but acceptable for a moderator analysis. Indigeneity and social adversity status made independent significant positive contributions to externalizing symptoms. In contrast the interaction between Indigeneity and social adversity status made a nonsignificant negative trend to externalizing symptoms. A scatterplot revealed Indigeneity moderated the link between social adversity status and externalizing symptoms.Conclusions:High social adversity status is linked to externalizing symptoms in non-Indigenous young people but despite higher social adversity, Indigenous young people don’t necessarily externalize. Potential protective resilience factors for externalizing symptoms in the Indigenous young people need to be ascertained and nurtured. Future systematic investigations of the contribution of these protective factors to Indigenous referral pathways and management are needed. It is also crucial that increased social adversity status is addressed and managed in all young people, regardless of Indigeneity.
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探究儿童和青少年的原住民身份、社会逆境状况与外化症状之间的关联
目的:土著身份、社会逆境状况和外化症状之间的关系既复杂又不明确。方法:从一家医院的心理健康门诊服务机构招募了 132 名 6-16 岁的原住民青少年和 247 名非原住民青少年。在年龄、性别、精神障碍症状严重程度、与症状相关的痛苦和损伤等方面进行匹配后,对两组青少年的社会逆境状况和家长报告的外化症状进行统计,并绘制了正态曲线图。我们使用标准多元回归法来研究 "土著性 "如何调节社会逆境状况与家长报告的外化症状之间的关系。散点图研究了在父母报告的外化症状的青少年中,印度血统与社会逆境状况之间的关联。结果:两组的分布以及(1)社会逆境状况和(2)父母报告的外化症状的分布都是非正态分布,但对于调节分析来说是可以接受的。原住民身份和社会逆境对外化症状有独立的显著正向影响。相比之下,"原籍 "和 "社会逆境 "之间的交互作用对外化症状的影响呈不显著的负向趋势。散点图显示,"土著性 "调节了社会逆境状况与外化症状之间的联系。需要确定和培养土著青少年外化症状的潜在保护性复原因素。今后需要对这些保护性因素对土著转介途径和管理的贡献进行系统调查。同样至关重要的是,无论原住民身份如何,所有青少年的社会逆境状况都应得到解决和管理。
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