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Journal Article

Citation

Feng JY, Hsieh YP, Hwa HL, Huang CY, Wei HS, Shen ACT. Child Abuse Negl. 2019; 91: 88-94.

Affiliation

Department of Social Work, National Taiwan University, 1, Roosevelt, Rd. Sec. 4, Taipei 106, Taiwan. Electronic address: acshen@ntu.edu.tw.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.chiabu.2019.02.013

PMID

30852428

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although research on the negative effects of childhood poly-victimization is substantial, few studies have examined the relationship between poly-victimization and younger children's physical health and diseases.

OBJECTIVE: This study examines the associations between poly-victimization and children's health problems requiring medical attention.

METHODS: A national stratified cluster random sampling was used to select and approach 25% of the total primary schools in Taiwan, and 49% of the approached schools agreed to participate in this study. We collected data with a self-report questionnaire from 6233 (4th-grade) students aged 10-11, covering every city and county in Taiwan.

RESULTS: Logistic regression analyses demonstrate a significant dose-response relationship between children's poly-victimization exposure and their health problems including hospitalization, serious injury, surgery, daily-medication requirements, heart murmurs, asthma, dizziness or fainting, allergies, kidney disease, therapies for special needs, smoking, and alcohol use. The results indicate that children's risk of having a health problem grew significantly with each increase in the number of victimization types that children experienced.

CONCLUSIONS: These research findings underscore the effect of poly-victimization on children's health problems requiring medical attention, and stress the need for both proper screening methods for children's exposure to poly-victimization and stronger awareness of poly-victimization's effects on health conditions in healthcare clinics.

Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Ltd.


Language: en

Keywords

Adverse childhood experiences; Childhood victimization; Health; Pediatric health outcome; Poly-victimization

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