Abstract
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is associated with interpersonal dysfunction during childhood and adolescence, yet little is known about the romantic relationships of young women with childhood ADHD. In the present study, we draw from a longitudinal sample of girls followed prospectively into young adulthood, comparing those with (n = 114) and without (n = 79; comparisons) childhood ADHD in terms of their risk for physical victimization by an intimate partner (physical IPV; e.g., slapping, punching) by 17–24 years of age. We examined ADHD both diagnostically and dimensionally, at the same time establishing reliable indicators of young adult physical IPV. Externalizing and internalizing problems, and academic achievement during adolescence, were tested as potential mediators. Overall, participants with a childhood diagnosis of ADHD experienced more physical IPV than did comparisons (30.7 % vs. 6.3 %). In parallel, IPV was associated with higher levels of childhood ADHD symptomatology (d = 0.73). Young women with persistent ADHD stood the highest risk of experiencing IPV (37.3 %), followed by those with transient ADHD (19.0 %) and those never-diagnosed (5.9 %). Academic achievement measured during adolescence was a significant partial mediator of the childhood ADHD symptomatology-young adult IPV relationship, even with control of sociodemographic, psychiatric, and cognitive factors, including childhood reading and math disorders. Findings indicate that in young women, childhood ADHD is a specific and important predictor of physically violent victimization in their intimate relationships. This vulnerable population requires IPV prevention and intervention, with academic empowerment as a key target.
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Notes
The Guendelman et al. (in press) investigation focused almost exclusively on maltreatment in the ADHD sample only, and examined outcomes related to maltreatment in Waves 1 and 2 combined.
Among the 114 participants with ADHD, victimization risk did not differ by Wave 1 ADHD subtype (Combined: 31.6 % vs. Inattentive: 28.9 %, χ 2(1, N = 114) = 0.08, OR = 1.13, 95 % CI [0.48, 2.66], p = 0.48).
Within the transient ADHD group (n = 58), 47 participants had a diagnosis of ADHD at Wave 1 only, whereas 11 had ADHD at Wave 3 only. Ten (21.3 %) of the participants with ADHD at Wave 1 only had physical IPV victimization, whereas one (9.1 %) of the participants with ADHD at Wave 3 only had physical IPV victimization, χ 2(1, N = 58) = 0.86, p = 0.33.
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Acknowledgments
This research was supported by funding from National Institute of Mental Health Grant 45064 (to S.P.H.). We gratefully acknowledge the young women who have participated in this longitudinal investigation, along with their caregivers and the large number of graduate students and staff who have made this research possible. We also thank Fred Loya, Ph.D., Orly Perlstein, Lisa Post Tornes, Leslie Ho, and Esther Rah.
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Guendelman, M.D., Ahmad, S., Meza, J.I. et al. Childhood Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Predicts Intimate Partner Victimization in Young Women. J Abnorm Child Psychol 44, 155–166 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-015-9984-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-015-9984-z