Prospective Relations among Low-Income African American Adolescents' Maternal Attachment Security, Self-Worth, and Risk Behaviors

Abstract

This study examined prospective mediating relations among mother-adolescent attachment security, self-worth, and risk behaviors, including substance use and violence, across ages 1317 in a sample of 901 low-income African American adolescents. Path analyses revealed that self-worth was a significant mediator between attachment security and risk behaviors, such that earlier attachment security predicted self-worth 1 year later, which in turn, predicted substance use, weapon carrying, and fighting in the 3rd year. Implications for the role of the secure base concept within the context of urban poverty are discussed.

Description
Keywords
attachment, adolescent, poverty, self-worth, substance use, violence, PARENT-CHILD ATTACHMENT, DYSFUNCTIONAL ATTITUDES, PEER RELATIONSHIPS, DEPRESSION, HEALTH, SYMPTOMS, ESTEEM, YOUTH, CONTINGENCIES, CONTEXTS, Psychology, Multidisciplinary, Psychology
Citation
Lockhart, G., Phillips, S., Bolland, A., Delgado, M., Tietjen, J., Bolland, J. (2017): Prospective Relations Among Low-Income African American Adolescents’ Maternal Attachment Security, Self-Worth, and Risk Behaviors. Frontiers in Psychology. 8(33).