Adolescent mental health problems are associated with poor health and
well-being in adulthood. This study uses data from a birth cohort of children
born in large U.S. cities (N=2,264) to examine whether neighborhood
collective efficacy (social cohesion and control) is associated with
improvements in adolescent mental health. We find that children who grow up in
high collective efficacy neighborhoods experience fewer depressive and anxiety
symptoms during adolescence than similar children from low collective efficacy
neighborhoods. The magnitude of this neighborhood effect is comparable to the
effects of depression prevention programs. Findings do not vary by family or
neighborhood income, indicating that neighborhood collective efficacy supports
adolescent mental health across diverse populations and urban settings. We
recommend greater emphasis on neighborhood environments in individual mental
health risk assessments and greater investment in community-based initiatives
that strengthen neighborhood social cohesion and control.
We aim to understand the association between father involvement in middle childhood and adolescent behaviors and whether the relationship differs by father residence. Background: Internalizing and externalizing behaviors in adolescence can trigger a cascade of negative outcomes later in life, including lower educational attainment, criminal justice involvement, and future psychological distress. Evidence, largely focusing on nonresidential fathers and older cohort, suggests that father involvement-particularly closeness and engagement-may reduce adolescents' internalizing and externalizing behaviors. Method: We use data six waves of the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study, a birth cohort survey representative of births in large U.S. cities between 1998 and 2000, to estimate OLS regression models examining (a) whether father involvement in middle childhood is associated with fewer problem behaviors at Age 15, (b) if the salience of father involvement differs depending on whether the father was present in the home (i.e., was married to or living with his child's mother) in middle childhood, and (c) whether father involvement matters differently based on the child's sex. Results: We find protective associations between father involvement and adolescent behavioral
About half of all renter households and over three-quarters of very low-income households in the United States experience a housing cost burden, with higher rates among families with children. Public housing may be an important tool for reducing families' housing cost burdens. The current study uses nearly four decades of data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and its Assisted Housing Database to explore the relationship between public housing and housing cost burden among children in low-income families. Results from fixed effects models suggest that public housing is associated with a greatly reduced risk of experiencing housing cost burden when housing assistance receipt is measured a year before housing cost burden. These findings highlight the importance of public housing for reducing low-income families' housing cost burdens.
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