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Patterns of Co-occurring Developmental Failures in Adolescence: Socioeconomic and Genetic Antecedents and Health Outcomes in Adulthood

Authors
Wickrama, K[Wickrama, Kandauda (K A. S)]Lee, TK[Lee, Tae Kyoung]Klopack, ET[Klopack, Eric T.]Lee, S[Lee, Seonhwa]O'Neal, CW[O'Neal, Catherine Walker]
Issue Date
3-Apr-2022
Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Keywords
Multiple developmental problems; co-occurrence; heterogeneity; polygenic scores; health Problems
Citation
BIODEMOGRAPHY AND SOCIAL BIOLOGY, v.67, no.2, pp.102 - 121
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
BIODEMOGRAPHY AND SOCIAL BIOLOGY
Volume
67
Number
2
Start Page
102
End Page
121
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/skku/handle/2021.sw.skku/96109
DOI
10.1080/19485565.2022.2052710
ISSN
1948-5565
Abstract
This study investigates (1) conjoint latent classes of adolescent co-occurring developmental problems (obesity, depressive symptoms, and low educational attainment), (2) socioeconomic and genetic influences on these classes of adolescents' problem trajectories, and (3) physical health consequences of those latent classes. Data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health; N = 9,107; mean age = 15.5 years; Female = 52.9 per cent) were used to identify classes of early socioeconomic adversity and conjoint trajectory groups of co-occurring developmental problems. Profiles of social antecedents, genetic endowments (polygenic scores), and physical health outcomes in young adulthood were compared across identified four conjoint trajectory risk groups (overall high-risk, overall low-risk, BMI-risk or obesity, low education-risk). The results showed that youth with overall high-risk and BMI/education-specific risk trajectory groups were more likely to be Black or Hispanic, reported more adverse socioeconomic characteristics and genetic endowment, and averaged significantly poorer physical health in young adulthood compared with youth in the overall low-risk problem trajectory group. Less pronounced differences emerged between the high-risk and problem-specific-risk groups. The findings highlight heterogeneity in adolescent co-occurring developmental problems. Adolescent heterogeneous problem co-development is associated with background socioeconomic and genetic characteristics and physical health in young adulthood.
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