This month’s highlights include:
Parental risk factors related to the mental health of youth from immigrant families
This review aimed to identify modifiable parental factors that could inform parenting interventions that may prevent mental health problems in young people with immigrant parents. 56 studies from high-income countries were included, including 2 from Australia. The study found that risk factors that were associated with negative mental health outcomes included parent-youth acculturative conflict, parental withdrawal, interparental conflict and parent mental health problems including parent stress, acculturative stress, anxiety/depression.
Resilience and emotional and behavioural wellbeing of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children
In this study, researchers co-designed a new measure for resilience with Aboriginal Torres Strait Islander and refugee-background communities. This measure was used to determine children’s personal, family and community strengths, gender differences and associations between resilience and wellbeing. 1132 parents/caregivers of children aged 5-12 years old were included in the study, 344 of these were mothers of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander children aged 5-9. The study found that resilience scores were strongly associated with wellbeing and high mental health competence. Child personal (e.g. self-identity, positive sense of the future) and family strengths (e.g. family connectedness, knowing that they are loved) were higher in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander children, than other children in the Childhood Resilience Study sample (such as children from refugee families).
Adverse childhood experiences and adolescent anxiety and depression symptoms
This study used a large Australian community-based sample to examine the association between a range of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and depression and anxiety symptoms in adolescents. The study found bullying victimisation and parental psychological distress were major contributors to elevated anxiety or depressive symptoms even after demographic characteristics and coexisting ACEs were taken into account. A larger total number of ACEs experienced by children was associated with greater odds of elevated depressive or anxiety symptoms. However, most individual ACEs such as household alcohol or drug abuse, unsafe neighbourhood, household financial stress were not associated with elevated anxiety and depressive symptoms after taking into account other factors that may interfere with the association (such as demographic characteristics and co-existing ACEs).
Childhood maltreatment, childhood adversity and mental health of people from OOHC
This study analysed data from OOHC experienced participants (n=395) in the Australian Maltreatment Study (ACMS) and compared it to the wider study sample (n=8503). Associations between experiences of maltreatment and other ACEs were examined in relation to adult mental health outcomes. Almost one in five children in OOHC sample had experienced all types of maltreatment and were more likely to have experienced at least three types of maltreatment (physical, emotional and sexual) than no maltreatment. Mental health was worse for those who experienced multiple types of maltreatment and have experienced OOHC, compared to those who experienced multiple types of maltreatment without OOHC experience.