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"Stoddard, Sarah"
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Promoting Positive Future Expectations During Adolescence: The Role of Assets
by
Pierce, Jennifer
,
Stoddard, Sarah A.
in
Adolescent
,
Adolescent Behavior - psychology
,
Adolescents
2015
Positive future expectations can facilitate optimal development and contribute to healthier outcomes for youth. Researchers suggest that internal resources and community-level factors may influence adolescent future expectations, yet little is known about the processes through which these benefits are conferred. The present study examined the relationship between contribution to community, neighborhood collective efficacy, purpose, hope and future expectations, and tested a mediation model that linked contribution to community and collective efficacy with future expectations through purpose and hope in a sample of 7th grade youth (N = 196; M
age
= 12.39; 60 % female; 40 % African American; 71 % economically disadvantaged). Greater collective efficacy and contribution to community predicted higher levels of hope and purpose. Higher levels of hope and purpose predicted more positive future expectations. Contribution to community and neighborhood collective efficacy indirectly predicted future expectations via hope. Implications of the findings and suggestions for future research are discussed.
Journal Article
Fatigue, pain interference, and psychiatric morbidity in multiple sclerosis: The role of childhood stress
by
Polick, Carri S.
,
Ploutz-Snyder, Robert
,
Stoddard, Sarah A.
in
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Cognition disorders
,
Complications and side effects
2023
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a progressive, autoimmune disease of the central nervous system that affects nearly one million Americans. Despite the existence of immunomodulatory therapies to slow physical and cognitive disability progression, interventions to ameliorate common symptoms of MS, including fatigue and pain, remain limited. Poor understanding of risk factors for these symptoms may contribute to treatment challenges. In recent years, childhood stress has been investigated as a risk factor for chronic autoimmune conditions including MS; yet remarkably few studies have investigated the relationship between childhood stressors and chronic MS symptoms. Our aim was to examine clusters of stressors and three key features of MS: fatigue, pain interference, and psychiatric morbidity. Cross-sectional data were collected from a sample of People with MS (PwMS) via a national web-based survey that assessed the presence and type of childhood stressors and MS clinical features. Hierarchical block regression was used to assess associations among emotional, physical, and environmental childhood stressors and three clinical features commonly experienced by PwMS. N = 719 adults with MS (aged 21-85) completed the survey. Childhood emotional and physical stressors were significantly associated with overall presence of fatigue (p = 0.02; p<0.03) and pain interference (p<0.001; p<0.001) in adulthood, as well as the magnitude of both outcomes. Environmental stressors (p<0.001), in addition to emotional (p<0.001) and physical (p<0.001) stressors were significantly associated with psychiatric morbidity in PwMS. Childhood stress may predict fatigue, psychiatric morbidity, and pain in adults with MS. Further research is needed to show cause and effect; however, if an association exists, strategies to mitigate the impact of childhood stress could offer new pathways to reduce the severity of these symptoms. Broadly, this work adds to the body of evidence supporting upstream preventive measures to help address the stress on children and families.
Journal Article
Neighborhoods, Social Support, and African American Adolescents' Mental Health Outcomes: A Multilevel Path Analysis
by
Zimmerman, Marc A.
,
Stoddard, Sarah A.
,
Hurd, Noelle M.
in
Adolescent
,
Adolescent Development
,
Adolescent girls
2013
This study explored how neighborhood characteristics may relate to African American adolescents' internalizing symptoms via adolescents' social support and perceptions of neighborhood cohesion. Participants included 571 urban, African American adolescents (52% female; M age = 17.8). A multilevel path analysis testing both direct and indirect effects of neighborhood characteristics on adolescents' mental health outcomes was conducted. Higher neighborhood poverty and unemployment rates predicted greater internalizing symptoms via lower cumulative social support and perceptions of neighborhood cohesion. In contrast, higher concentrations of African American and residentially stable residents in one's neighborhood related to fewer internalizing symptoms among adolescent residents via greater cumulative social support and perceptions of neighborhood cohesion. Implications of these findings are discussed.
Journal Article
Thinking About the Future as a Way to Succeed in the Present: A Longitudinal Study of Future Orientation and Violent Behaviors Among African American Youth
by
Zimmerman, Marc A.
,
Bauermeister, José A.
,
Stoddard, Sarah A.
in
Adolescence
,
Adolescent
,
Adolescent Behavior - psychology
2011
Previous research has linked higher levels of hopelessness about one’s future to violent behavior during adolescence; however, little is known about this relationship over time for adolescents. Using growth curve modeling, we tested the association between future orientation and violent behavior across the high school years of adolescence in a sample of African American youth (
n
= 681). Variation based on demographic characteristics (i.e., sex, SES, previous violence) was explored. At baseline, differences in violent behavior varied by demographic characteristics. Overall, violent behavior decreased with age. Higher levels of future orientation were associated with greater decreases in violent behavior over time. Demographic characteristics were not associated with change in violent behavior overtime. Our findings suggest that future orientation can act as a promotive factor for at risk African American youth. Interventions that help support the development of future goals and aspirations could play a vital role in violence prevention efforts.
Journal Article
Peer Recovery Coaches Perceptions of Their Work and Their Implications for Training, Support and Personal Recovery
by
Tyson, Ronnie
,
Felton, Julia W.
,
Furr-Holden, C. Debra
in
Clinical outcomes
,
Community
,
Community and Environmental Psychology
2023
The peer recovery workforce, including individuals in sustained recovery from substance use, has grown rapidly in the previous decades. Peer recovery coaches represent a scalable, resource-efficient, and acceptable approach to increasing service delivery, specifically among individuals receiving substance use services in low-resource communities. Despite the potential to improve access to care in traditionally underserved settings, there are a number of barriers to successfully integrating peer recovery coaches in existing recovery services. The current study presents results from two focus groups composed of peer recovery coaches. Findings suggest that peer recovery coaches report discordance between their perceived role and their daily responsibilities and experience both inter- and intrapersonal challenges that impact their own recovery processes. These results point to several promising policy and structural changes that may support and enhance this growing workforce.
Journal Article
The Association of Adolescent Internalizing and Externalizing Behavior Problems and Prospective Self with Alcohol and Cannabis Use
by
De Geronimo, Francesca G.
,
Stoddard, Sarah A.
,
Keating, Daniel P.
in
adolescent
,
Alcohol use
,
Behavior
2024
Adolescent alcohol and cannabis use pose significant developmental risks. This study examined internalizing and externalizing problems as risk factors and prospective self as a protective factor in relation to alcohol and cannabis use. Self-report data were collected from a diverse sample (N = 2017) of 15–17-year-olds using the Youth Self Report (YSR) for behavior issues and prospective self, a factor-derived variable reflecting future orientation, resistance to peer influence, and academic aspirations. Participants reported on 15 health risk behaviors, including alcohol and cannabis use. Weighted linear regressions evaluated associations between risk and protective factors and substance use. Results indicated a higher externalizing behavior was linked to increased alcohol and cannabis use, while a higher prospective self and internalizing behavior were linked to reduced alcohol use. Higher prospective self was associated with less cannabis use. Interaction terms were largely non-significant, except for the interaction between prospective self and internalizing behavior, where higher internalizing problems and high prospective self were linked to increased cannabis use. The findings highlight the importance of prospective self, especially at clinically elevated levels of behavior problems, and recommend further exploration of the unexpected positive associations between internalizing behavior and prospective self with cannabis use.
Journal Article
Social Connections, Trajectories of Hopelessness, and Serious Violence in Impoverished Urban Youth
by
Sieving, Renee E
,
Stoddard, Sarah A
,
Henly, Susan J
in
Adolescent
,
Adolescent Behavior - psychology
,
Adolescent Development
2011
Youth living in impoverished urban neighborhoods are at risk for becoming hopeless about their future and engaging in violent behaviors. The current study seeks to examine the longitudinal relationship between social connections, hopelessness trajectories, and subsequent violent behavior across adolescence. Our sample included 723 (49% female) African American youth living in impoverished urban neighborhoods who participated in the Mobile Youth Survey from 1998 through 2006. Using general growth mixture modeling, we found two hopelessness trajectory classes for both boys and girls during middle adolescence: a consistently low hopelessness class and an increasingly hopeless class with quadratic change. In all classes, youth who reported stronger early adolescent connections to their mothers were less hopeless at age 13. The probability of later adolescent violence with a weapon was higher for boys and was associated with the increasingly hopeless class for both boys and girls. Implications for new avenues of research and design of hope-based prevention interventions will be discussed.
Journal Article
The Relationship Between Cumulative Risk and Promotive Factors and Violent Behavior Among Urban Adolescents
by
Whiteside, Lauren
,
Cunningham, Rebecca M.
,
Walton, Maureen A.
in
Adolescent
,
Adolescent Behavior - psychology
,
Adolescent resiliency
2013
Resiliency theory posits that some youth exposed to risk factors do not develop negative behaviors due to the influence of promotive factors. This study examines the effects of cumulative risk and promotive factors on adolescent violent behavior and tests two models of resilience—the compensatory model and the protective model—in a sample of adolescent patients (14–18 years old; n = 726) presenting to an urban emergency department who report violent behavior. Cumulative measures of risk and promotive factors consist of individual characteristics and peer, family, and community influences. Hierarchical multiple regression was used to test the two models of resilience (using cumulative measures of risk and promotive factors) for violent behavior within a sample of youth reporting violent behavior. Higher cumulative risk was associated with higher levels of violent behavior. Higher levels of promotive factors were associated with lower levels of violent behavior and moderated the association between risk and violent behaviors. Our results support the risk-protective model of resiliency and suggest that promotive factors can help reduce the burden of cumulative risk for youth violence.
Journal Article
Associations among stressors across the lifespan, disability, and relapses in adults with multiple sclerosis
2023
Introduction
Stress and adversity during childhood, adolescence, and adulthood could impact the present and future health and well‐being of people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS); however, a lifespan approach and nuanced stressor data are scarce in this nascent area of research. Our aim was to examine relationships among comprehensively measured lifetime stressors and two self‐reported MS outcomes: (1) disability and (2) relapse burden changes since COVID‐19 onset.
Methods
Cross‐sectional data were collected from a nationally distributed survey of U.S.‐based adults with MS. Hierarchical block regressions were used to sequentially evaluate contributions to both outcomes independently. Likelihood ratio (LR) tests and Akaike information criterion (AIC) were used to evaluate additional predictive variance and model fit.
Results
A total of 713 participants informed either outcome. Most respondents (84%) were female, 79% had relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis (MS), and mean (SD) age was 49 (12.7) years. Childhood (R2 = .261, p < .001; AIC = 1063, LR p < .05) and adulthood stressors (R2 = .2725, p < .001, AIC = 1051, LR p < .001) contributed significantly to disability, above and beyond prior nested models. Only adulthood stressors (R2 = .0534, p < .001; AIC = 1572, LR p < .01) significantly contributed above the nested model for relapse burden changes since COVID‐19.
Conclusions
Stressors across the lifespan are commonly reported in PwMS and could contribute to disease burden. Incorporating this perspective into the “lived experience with MS” could facilitate personalized health care by addressing key stress‐related exposures and inform intervention research to improve well‐being.
The effect of stressors across the lifespan on Multiple Sclerosis is an under‐researched area. We found that both childhood and adulthood stressors contributed to disability; while only adult stressors contributed to relapse burden since Covid‐19 onset. This study highlights the importance of comprehensively addressing lifetime stressors
Journal Article
Exposure to Violence Predicting Cortisol Response During Adolescence and Early Adulthood: Understanding Moderating Factors
2014
Previous research on the association between violence and biological stress regulation has been largely cross-sectional, and has also focused on childhood. Using longitudinal data from a low-income, high-risk, predominantly African-American sample (
n
= 266; 57 % female), we tested hypotheses about the influence of cumulative exposure to violence during adolescence and early adulthood on cortisol responses in early adulthood. We found that cumulative exposure to violence predicted an attenuated cortisol response. Further, we tested whether sex, mothers’ support, or fathers’ support moderated the effect of exposure to violence on cortisol responses. We found that the effect of cumulative exposure to violence on cortisol was modified by sex; specifically, males exposed to violence exhibited a more attenuated response pattern. In addition, the effect of cumulative exposure to violence on cortisol was moderated by the presence of fathers’ support during adolescence. The findings contribute to a better understanding of how cumulative exposure to violence influences biological outcomes, emphasizing the need to understand sex and parental support as moderators of risk.
Journal Article