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Female and male antisocial trajectories: From childhood origins to adult outcomes PDF

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DevelopmentandPsychopathology20(2008),673–716 Copyright#2008CambridgeUniversityPress PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica DOI:10.1017/S0954579408000333 Female and male antisocial trajectories: From childhood origins to adult outcomes CANDICEL.ODGERS,aTERRIEE.MOFFITT,b,c JONATHANM.BROADBENT,dNIGELDICKSON,dROBERTJ.HANCOX,d HONALEEHARRINGTON,eRICHIEPOULTON,dMALCOLMR.SEARS,f W.MURRAYTHOMSON,dANDAVSHALOMCASPIb,c aUniversityofCalifornia–Irvine;bKing’sCollege,London;cDukeUniversity;dUniversityof Otago,NewZealand;eUniversityofWisconsin;and fMcMasterUniversity Abstract Thisarticlereportsonthechildhoodoriginsandadultoutcomesoffemaleversusmaleantisocialbehaviortrajectories intheDunedinlongitudinalstudy.Fourantisocialbehaviortrajectorygroupswereidentifiedamongfemalesandmales usinggeneralgrowthmixturemodelingandincludedlife-coursepersistent(LCP),adolescent-onset,childhood-limited, andlowtrajectorygroups.Duringchildhood,bothLCPfemalesandmaleswerecharacterizedbysocial,familialand neurodevelopmentalriskfactors,whereasthoseontheadolescent-onsetpathwaywerenot.Atage32,womenandmen ontheLCPpathwaywereengaginginseriousviolenceandexperiencingsignificantmentalhealth,physicalhealth,and economicproblems.Femalesandmalesontheadolescent-onsetpathwaywerealsoexperiencingdifficultiesatage32, althoughtoalesserextent.AlthoughmoremalesthanfemalesfollowedtheLCPtrajectory,findingssupportsimilarities acrossgenderwithrespecttodevelopmentaltrajectoriesofantisocialbehaviorandtheirassociatedchildhoodorigins andadultconsequences.Implicationsfortheory,research,andpracticearediscussed. This article tests whether the two prototypes andadolescencelimited(AL),canbeidentified specifiedbyadevelopmentaltaxonomyofanti- withinaprospectivebirthcohortoffemalesand social behavior, life-course persistent (LCP) males via general growth mixture modeling (GGMM). Advanced longitudinal methods are applied to test taxonomic predictions regarding ThisworkwassupportedbygrantsfromtheUSNational developmental course, childhood origins, and Institute of Mental Health (Grants MH45070 and adult consequences, with particularattention to MH49414), UK Medical Research Council (G0100527), the study of gender differences in antisocial EconomicandSocialResearchCouncil,WilliamT.Grant behavior. Foundation,HealthResearchCouncilofNewZealand,So- cialSciencesandHumanitiesResearchCouncilofCanada Untilrecently,interestandresearchdirected (756-2004-0041),andUSNationalInstituteforDentaland at understanding trajectories of antisocial be- Craniofacial Research (R01 DE-015260-01A1). Candice haviorhasfocusedprimarilyonmales(Lacourse, L.OdgersisaMichaelSmithFoundationforHealthRe- Nagin, Tremblay, Vitaro, & Claes, 2003; searchTrainee.TerrieE.MoffittandAvshalomCaspiare Schaeffer,Petras,Ialongo,Poduska,&Kellman, Royal Society Wolfson Research Merit Award holders. WethanktheDunedinstudymembers,Unitresearchstaff, 2003;Shaw,Lacourse,&Nagin,2005;Tremblay Alan Taylor, Louise Arsenault, Daniel Nagin, and study etal.,2004;Wiesner&Capaldi,2003).Classic founderPhilSilva. longitudinal studies in life-course criminology Address correspondence and reprint requests to: anddevelopmentalpsychologyhaveestablished CandiceL.Odgers,DepartmentofPsychologyandSocial theimportanceofchildhood-onsetconductprob- Behavior, University of California–Irvine, Irvine, CA 92697-7085;E-mail:[email protected]. lemsandearlyinvolvementinantisocialbehavior 673 674 C.L.Odgersetal. inpredictingfuturecrimeamongmales(Elliott, research has consistently shown that girls Huizinga, & Menard, 1989; Farrington, 1989; have lower rates than boys of symptoms of Farrington,1995;Wolfgang,Thornberry,&Fig- nervous system dysfunction, difficult tempera- lio,1987).Overthelastdecade,researchgener- ment, hyperactivity, reading failure and learn- atedbyadevelopmentaltaxonomyofantisocial ing disabilities (Gorman-Smith & Loeber, behavior has refined our understanding of the 2005;Laheyetal.,2006;Messeretal.,2006). importanceofchildhood-onsetbehavioralprob- Thus, the consequent processes of cumulative lemsbydelineating,andtesting,expectationsre- continuity ensue for fewer girls than boys, re- gardingtheuniquedevelopmentalcourse,child- sulting in a smaller number of girls following hoodorigins,andadultprognosisformaleson theLCPpathway.TheALpathwayisalsohy- the LCP versus AL pathways (Moffitt, 2006; pothesized to be open to females. According Moffitt, Capsi, Harrington, & Milne, 2002). to the theory, girls, like boys, should begin Theoriginalstatementofthetaxonomyasserted engaging in antisocial behavior soon after pu- thatthetheoryshouldaccountforthebehavior berty to the extent to which they have access offemalesaswellasitaccountsforthebehavior to antisocial role models and perceive the ofmales(Moffitt,1994).Todate,however,the consequencesofantisocialbehaviorasreinforc- majority of empirical research has focused on ing. Although girls, because of gender-typed males, and we know relatively little about the socialization, may experience heightened per- relevance of the developmental taxonomy to ceptions of serious personal risk associated females. with involvement in antisocial behavior, it is Inanutshell,theoriginaldevelopmentaltax- expectedthatfemalesshouldengageinALan- onomy of antisocial behavior proposed that at tisocial behavior in significant numbers and leasttwoprototypicalsubtypesunderlietheob- should resemble their male AL counterparts served age by crime distribution (Moffitt, byhavingfewchildhooddeficitsandmanyde- 1993): an LCP pathway that is characterized linquent peers during adolescence (Moffitt, bysocial,familial,andneurodevelopmentaldef- 2004). In short, the taxonomy predicted fe- icits,onsetsinearlychildhood,anddistinguishes malesareseldomLCPbutareoftenadolescent arelativelysmall,yetpersistentandpathological limited, and the childhood correlates of both subgroupofindividuals,andanALpathwaythat subtypesareassumedtobesimilaracrossgen- is hypothesized to be more common, relatively der(Moffittetal.,2001). transient, and near normative. AL involvement Although still in its infancy, the study of in antisocial behavior is believed to emerge girls’ involvement in antisocial behavior and alongside puberty as a relatively normative re- aggression has grown significantly over the sponse to the roleless years between biological last 2 decades (Giordano, Cernkovich, Stoff, maturation and access to mature privileges and Breiling, & Maser, 1997; Moffitt et al., 2001; responsibilities, a period of time labeled the Moretti, Odgers, & Jackson, 2004; Odgers & “maturity gap.” Although those on the LCP Moretti,2002;Pepler,Madsen,Webster,&Le- pathway are expected to experience multiple vene,2005;Putallaz&Bierman,2004;Serbin, problems in adulthood, AL individuals, given Peters, McAffer, & Schwartzman, 1991; Un- the normative nature of their preteen develop- derwood,2003).Asresearchersbegintopiece ment, are hypothesized to be more successful together information from across diverse sam- in their transition to adulthood, provided that ples, the question of whether female-specific theydonotencountersnares,suchassubstance theories of antisocial behavior are required is dependencyoracriminalrecord. beginning to come into focus. To date, how- Theoriginalstatementofthetaxonomywas ever, there is no comprehensive theory of the intended to apply to females as well as males developmentofantisocialbehaviorthatisspe- (Moffitt,1994;Moffittetal.,2001).Withinthe cifictofemales.Becausethevastmajorityoffe- developmental taxonomy, much of the gender maleantisocialbehavioronsetsinadolescence, difference in levels of antisocial behavior is at- someresearchershavearguedthatachildhood- tributedto gender differences in the individual onsetLCPsubtypemaynotexistforgirlsand, risk factors for persistent antisocial behavior; instead, only an adolescent-onset subtype is Femaleandmaleantisocialtrajectories 675 requiredtocharacterizegirls’antisocialbehav- summarized the growing bodyof empirical ior(Silverthorn&Frick,1999).Althoughnew evidence for antisocial subgroups not orig- research is still emerging, to date, virtually all inally specified by the taxonomy; these epidemiological studies testing whether gen- subgroups, labeled, “childhood limited” der-specific pathways of antisocial behavior (Farrington, Gallagher, Morley, Stledger, exist have identified a “childhood-onset” or & West, 1988; Moffitt, Caspi, Dickman, “early-starter”pathwayamongfemales(Bong- Silva,&Stanton,1996;Wiesner&Capaldi, ers, Koot, van der Ende, & Verhulst, 2004; 2003) and “low-level chronic” (D’Unger, Broidy et al., 2003; Cote´, Tremblay, Nagin, Land, McCall, & Nagin, 1998; Nagin, Far- Zoccolillo, & Vitaro,2002;Fergusson &Hor- rington, & Moffitt, 1995) have emerged wood, 2002; Lahey et al., 2006; Schaeffer across a number of longitudinal studies, et al., 2006). For example, in an analysis of butdonotyethavewell-articulatedtheories epidemiological samples from Canada, New regarding etiology, developmental course, Zealand,andtheUnitedStates,Broidyandcol- and prognosis. Thus, the present study ap- leagues (2003) identified an early-onset path- plied the latest generation of trajectory- wayofgirls,basedonteacherreportedaggres- basedmodelingtechniques,GGM(Muthe´n, sion, in three of the four samples. Similarly, 2004),totestwhethertheoriginalsubtypes Cote´ and colleagues, in a representative study ofLCPandALantisocialbehavioremerged, of Canadian girls, identified two early-starter withaneyetowardinvestigatingwhetheran pathways of antisocial behavior (aggressive additional subgroup(s) wasrequired.More- plus oppositional behaviors) that went on to over, prior research has not tested whether have higher rates of conduct disorder (CD) thesamebehaviorstaptheconstructofanti- than later starters. More recently,both Schaef- social behavior in the same way across de- fer and colleagues (2006) and Lahey and col- velopment and gender. In other words, it leagues (2006) reported finding early-starter has been assumed that administering the subgroupsoffemaleswhodemonstratedchroni- samemeasureacrosstime,andacrossmales cally high levels of antisocial behavior across and females, provides a common valid childhood and early adolescence; these early- metric for assessing antisocial behavior. In starter girls, like their male counterparts, were thecurrentstudy,weempiricallytestthisas- atanincreasedriskforlaterantisocialoutcomes. sumptionandevaluatewhetherourmeasure Although initial evidence suggests that an of antisocial behavior is invariant across early-onset pathway for girls may exist, there both time and gender prior to mapping de- has not yet been a comprehensive test of the velopmentaltrajectories. extension of the developmental taxonomy of 2. Childhood origins: Are the childhood ori- antisocial behavior to females with respect to ginsfortheLCPandALsubgroupsconsis- developmental course, childhood origins, and tent with expectations from the taxonomy? adult outcomes. In the present study we tested That is, similar to their male counterparts, whether predictions stemming from the devel- females on the LCP pathway are expected opmental taxonomy hold in a birth cohort of to be characterized by social, familial, and femalesandmalesthathavebeenfollowedpro- neurodevelopmental deficits in childhood. spectivelyuntilage32.Withaspecificempha- Incontrast,thoseontheALpathwayshould sisonage32findings,weaddressedthreesets score closer to the low antisocial subgroup ofquestions: (or average Dunedin child) on childhood risk factors. Previous work with males in 1. Developmental course: Do the three sub- the Dunedin study has demonstrated that groups anticipated by the developmental LCPantisocialbehaviorisdifferentiallypre- taxonomy,namely,LCP,AL,andlowanti- dictedbythesechildhoodriskfactors(Mof- social pathways, emerge among females fitt& Caspi,2001),with the same riskfac- and males in a 30-year prospective birth tors documented for the small number of cohort study? Is an additional subgroup females classified as belonging to the LCP needed? A recent review (Moffitt, 2006) pathway (Moffitt et al., 2001). However, 676 C.L.Odgersetal. prior research has relied on classifications informed consent at ages 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, derived via clinical algorithms. In the pre- 18, 21, 26, and 32 years of age, when 96% of sentstudy,subtypesaredefinedusingtrajec- the living Study members were assessed in tory-based statistical models and validated 2003–2005. Cross-national comparisons lend using a subset of childhood risk indicators confidenceregardingthegeneralizationoffind- selected from extensive analyses of earlier ings from the Dunedin study to other industri- wavesoftheDunedinStudy. alizednations(Moffittetal.,2001). 3. Adult outcomes: Do predictions stemming from the taxonomic theory regarding adult Measures outcomes demonstrate predictive validity among females? Specifically, do women Antisocialconductproblemsweremeasuredat on the LCP pathway experience the worst ages 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 18, 21, and 26 years adult consequences at age 32? Prior work through scoring six keysymptoms of DSM-IV with Dunedin females has demonstrated CDasbeingpresentorabsentateachage:phys- that CD during adolescence predicted a ical fighting, bullying others, destroying prop- wide range of negative outcomes in early erty, telling lies, truancy, and stealing (Ameri- adulthood (Bardone, Moffitt, Caspi, & canPsychiatricAssociation,1994).Acomposite Dickinson,1996)andpreviouspublications score,rangingfrom0to6,wasformedateach report Dunedin males’ outcomes age 26 assessmentagerepresentingthenumberofdif- (Moffitt et al., 2002) and age 32 (Odgers, ferent types of antisocial behavior the individ- Caspi,etal.,2007);however,itisnotknown ualhadengagedinduringthepastyear(antiso- whetheradultoutcomesvaryacrossdistinct cialconductproblems“varietyscore”).Variety developmental subtypes of antisocial fe- scores are highly correlated with frequency males or whether poor prognosis in adult- scores(howoftenthechildexhibitedantisocial hood extends to include poor physical behavior in the past year) and are commonly health. Thus, this paper differs from prior used in population-based studies. Other DSM- publications in that it (a) focuses on devel- IV CD symptoms were not used because they opmental trajectories for females, along didnotcoverthestudy’sagespan(e.g.,running with male comparisons; (b) formally tests away, staying out late) or had very rare preva- whether antisocial behavior is being mea- lence (e.g., fire setting, forced gender, animal sured in the same way across males and cruelty). Each of the six conduct problem females; and(c) expandsthe rangeof adult symptoms was operationalized through multi- outcomestotheageof32toincludeassess- ple items collected at each age: the symptom ments of violence, mental health, physical was considered present if any item in the set health,andeconomicproblemsamongboth was endorsed by a reporter. Symptoms were malesandfemales. adapted across the age span to ensure that the measures were developmentally appropriate. “Truancy” included items such as skipping Method schoolforyoungerstudentsandworkabsentee- ismforolderemployedStudymembers;“bully- Participants ing”includeditemssuchasbullyingotherchil- ParticipantsaremembersoftheDunedinMulti- dren, threatening violence, and at older ages, disciplinary Health and Development Study. robbery; “stealing” included items such as The cohort of 1,037 children (52% male) was stealing from school or home, shoplifting, constitutedat3yearsofage,wheninvestigators auto theft, burglary, absconding from a rental enrolled 91%ofconsecutiveeligiblebirthsbe- with unpaid bills or rent, and embezzlement tweenApril1972andMarch1973inDunedin, from employers. “Fighting” included items NewZealand.Cohortfamiliesrepresentthefull such fights with otherchildren, fighting in the range of socioeconomic status (SES) in New street, gang fighting, and assault. “Telling Zealand’sSouthIslandandareprimarilyWhite. lies”includeditemssuchastellsliestoparents Follow-up assessments were conducted with and teachers, lying about their age, and Femaleandmaleantisocialtrajectories 677 providing false information on job or loan containeditemssuchas,“Inourfamily,webe- applications. “Destroying property” included lieve you don’t ever get anywhere by raising items such as purposely destroying or dam- your voice” and “Family members sometimes aging other’s property. The study’s reporting hiteachother.” sourceswerealsodevelopmentallyappropriate, Inconsistentdisciplinewasmeasuredatages includingparentandteacherinchildhood;self, 7and 9aspartofaninterviewabouthowpar- parent, and teacher in adolescence; and self ents dealt with the study child when he or she alone in adulthood. The prevalence of each misbehaved. Mothers evaluated their own dis- CD symptom and average scale scores by age cipline, as well as their husband’s discipline andgenderareincludedinTable1;withtheex- on a 4-point scale (1 ¼ always the same; 4 ¼ ception of age 15, males scored significantly verychangeable). higherthanfemalesonantisocialconductatevery assessmentage.Thereliabilityvaluesforthescale Parentalfeatures rangedfroma..60betweenages7and15and a..50betweenages18and26. Mother’s mental health problems were mea- sured with the Malaise Inventory, a 24-item questionnairethatwascompletedbytheStudy Childhoodpredictors members’ mothers when the study members Each childhood measure is described briefly, were 7 and 9. The questionnaire (Rodgers, accompanied bya reference that reports details Pickles, Power, Collishaw,& Maughan, 1999; ofdatacollection,variableconstruction,reliabil- Rutter, Tizard, & Whitmore, 1970) samples a ity,andvalidity.Themeasuresinthiscohortare varietyofcommonsymptomsofemotionaldis- described in Moffitt et al. (2001, 2002) unless turbance,andisheavilyweightedwithitemsre- otherwisespecified.Allmeasureshaveareliabil- flecting affective stress response (e.g., easily ityof..70,asassessedbyinternalconsistency, upset, miserable) and somatic symptoms (e.g., test–retest,orinterrateranalysis,as appropriate. tiredness,headaches). The childhood measures listed below were Mother’s IQ was tested using the Science selected based on extensive analyses of earlier Research Associates (SRA) verbal test (Thur- wavesofdataintheDunedinStudy. stone & Thurstone, 1973) when the children were age 3; standardized to population (M ¼ 100, SD ¼ 15). Low mother IQ was defined Familycharacteristicsandcontext as,85onthestandardizedSRAscore. SESwasmeasuredasthehighestoffather’sor Parentcriminalconvictionwasmeasuredby mother’s occupation using a 6-point scale for parental report in 1998, when parents’ ages New Zealand (Elley & Irving, 1976); 21% of rangedfrom40to75.Ofparents,12%reported the families were classified as low SES, 63% theyhadbeenconvictedinthecriminalcourts. asmediumSES,and16%ashighSES. Maltreatment was measured using staff ob- Childfactors servationsofrejectingmother–childinteraction at age3, parental reports of harshdiscipline at ChildIQwastestedusingtheWechslerIntelli- ages7and 9,twoor more changesin primary gence Scale for Children—Revised (WISC-R; caregiver to age 11, and retrospective reports Wechsler, 1974) at ages 7, 9, 11, and 13, and bystudymembersatage26ofinjuriousphys- thefourvalueswereaveragedtoenhancerelia- ical abuse or unwanted sexual contact before bility;standardizedtopopulation(M¼100,SD age 11. Nine percent of boys and girls had ¼15).LowchildIQwasdefinedas,85onthe twoor more indicatorsof maltreatment (Caspi standardizedWISC-Rscore. etal.,2002). Undercontrolled temperament was mea- Family conflict was measured at ages 7 sured through staff ratings after observing the and 9 with the Moos Family Relations Index childina90-mintestingsessionwithanunfa- (Moos & Moos, 1981) completed by mothers miliarexamineratage3.Factorandclusteranaly- of the study members. The conflict subscale sesreducedthese ratingsto three temperament Table1. Frequencies of antisocial conduct problem items byageand gender Age 7 9 11 13 15 18 21 26 32 AntisocialCPItems (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) Fight Males 59.1 55.5 44.3 62.1 43.0 52.2 37.5 29.1 11.0 Females 47.5 41.9 35.3 47.8 38.0 37.9 29.7 24.4 10.1 Destroy Males 27.4 24.9 20.8 23.5 25.7 13.0 18.9 9.0 6.9 Females 16.8 9.5 7.2 8.1 16.3 4.8 5.1 1.0 1.3 Lie Males 45.1 41.1 39.2 29.0 31.4 72.7 46.3 52.2 43.8 Females 35.5 27.3 27.0 25.5 30.0 64.8 25.4 42.6 30.9 6 Steal 7 8 Males 24.4 25.3 25.6 21.3 24.5 23.3 27.0 31.9 21.5 Females 18.5 12.1 15.3 15.0 20.9 11.4 16.2 21.4 10.5 Truant Males 3.0 5.1 4.6 13.2 29.4 6.7 11.0 12.4 — Females 2.0 1.5 1.6 7.0 32.8 7.2 8.8 9.6 — Bully/rob Males 31.9 32.6 26.0 22.7 17.4 2.5 1.0 0.6 0.0 Females 26.6 20.2 22.3 17.0 14.6 0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 7 9 11 13 15 18 21 26 32 AntisocialCPScale M(SD) M(SD) M(SD) M(SD) M(SD) M(SD) M(SD) M(SD) M(SD) Males 1.91(1.60) 1.84(1.71) 1.66(1.68) 1.73(1.61) 1.70(1.55) 1.70(1.27) 1.41(1.34) 1.48(1.31) 0.83(1.00) Females 1.47(1.48) 1.13(1.34) 1.14(1.37) 1.22(1.61) 1.52(1.55) 1.27(1.03) 0.84(1.00) 1.04(1.05) 0.53(0.70) Note:CP,conductproblems.Truancywasnotassessedatage32;thedifferencesbetweenantisocialconductproblemscalescoresformalesversusfemalesarestatisticallysignificant(p,.001)at allages,exceptforage15(p¼.08). Femaleandmaleantisocialtrajectories 679 types, including the undercontrolled type applies).Itemswereaveragedtocreateanover- (Caspi&Silva,1995),sincereplicatedinother allpeerdelinquencyscore. samples (Asendorpf, Borkenau, Ostendorf, & VanAken,2001;Hart,Atkins,&Fegley,2003; Age32outcomes Robins, John, Caspi, Moffitt, & Silva, 1996). Full psychometric details are provided else- Each age 32 outcome is described briefly, ac- where(Caspi,2000). companied by a reference that reports details Heart ratewas measured by nurse examin- of data collection, variable construction, relia- ers at ages 7, 9, and 11. At each age, an aver- bilityandvalidity. age heart rate measurewas derived from mea- sures of resting heart rate taken by a nurse on Age32violencetowardothers threeoccasionsduringthecourseofthephysi- cal examination. The (age standardized) mea- Violencetowardotherswasselectedasthepri- suresofrestingheartratefromthethreeagepe- mary age 32 index of antisocial behavior as it riodswereaveragedtoformtheoverallscore. represents the most serious form of antisocial Readingachievementwasmeasuredatages behaviorand is recognized as one of the most 7, 9, and 11 by the Burt Word Reading Test significantglobalhealthproblems(Krug,Dahl- (Scottish Council for Research in Education, berg,&Mercy,2002). 1976), a word recognition test having norma- Partnerabuseinthepastyearatage32was tivestandardsforNewZealandchildren,which measuredinastandardizedinterviewabout13 resemblestheAmericanWide-RangeAchieve- physical abuse acts (e.g., slapping, strangling, ment Test of reading. The (age standardized) kicking, hitting, beating up, forcing sex, and readingscoresfromthethreeageperiodswere using a weapon) and 13 controlling abuse combinedtoformanoverallscore. acts (e.g., damaging clothes, car or pet; stop- Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) ping contact with family or friends; stalking). was measured using the Diagnostic Interview Dunedin men’s and women’s self-reports for Children—Child Version (Costello, Edel- have been previously validated against their brock, Kalas, Kessler,& Klaric, 1982) at ages partners’ reports and found to be reliable and 11,13,and15.Diagnosesweremadeaccording valid (Moffitt et al., 1997). Study members to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of who reported any perpetration of physical Mental Disorders—Third Edition (DSM-III; abuse within a relationship were classified as American Psychiatric Association, 1980) and engaging in physical abuse. Study members confirmed through parent or teacher report in- who engaged in two or more types of control- cluding age of onset before age 7; 6% of the ling behavior within the past year were classi- cohort was diagnosed. Dunedin was the first fiedasengagingincontrollingabuse. cohortstudytouseastandarddiagnosticinter- HittingachildwasassessedduringtheSelf- viewin1983whenstudymemberswere11years Report Crime Interview. Study members were old. Therefore, information on ADHD symp- askedoneitemabouthittingorotherwisehurt- tomsreportedbymothersandteachersonscales ingachildoutofanger(Moffittetal.,2002). at ages 5 and 7 was used to confirm symptom Self-reportedviolenceinthepastyearatage onsetbeforetheageof7forDSMdiagnosis. 32wasmeasuredusingtheUSNationalYouth Peer delinquency was assessed using 10 Survey Self-Report Crime Interview (Elliott items from the Revised Problem Behavior et al., 1989). Items ascertained simple assault, Checklist (Quay, 1983; Quay & Peterson, aggravated assault, gang fighting, robbery, ar- 1993) that was completed by the Study mem- son, and forced sex (Moffitt et al., 2002). bers’ mothers when the study members were Assaultsagainstpartnersandchildrenwereex- 15. The peer delinquency subscale contained cluded to avoid overlap with the abovemen- 10items,suchas“belongstoagang”and“as- tionedmeasures.Studymemberswhoreported sociates with rougher peers,” measured on a engaging in at least one act of violencewithin 3-point scale (0 ¼ no, does not apply, 1 ¼ the last year were classified as engaging in yes, applies somewhat, 2 ¼ yes, certainly self-reportedviolenceatage32. 680 C.L.Odgersetal. Informant-reportedfightinginthepastyear rated the study member’s impairment on three atage32wasmeasuredbymailingabriefques- symptoms of anxiety (e.g., “has unreasonable tionnaire to people nominated by the Study fearsorworries,”“worriesalot,”“getsnervous member as knowing him/her well (informants easily”),andfoursymptomsofdepression(e.g., included friends, partners and family mem- “feelsthat no one lovesthem,” “seems lonely,” bers). Full details of the Dunedin Study infor- “feels depressed, miserable, sad, or unhappy,” mant rating system are provided elsewhere “talks about suicide”) using a 3-point scale (Moffitt et al., 2002). Information from infor- (0¼no,doesnotapply,1¼yes,appliessome- mantswasavailablefor96%ofstudymembers what, 2 ¼ yes, certainly applies). The seven seen at age 32. Informants were asked to rate symptomswerecombinedtoformaninternaliz- whether the study member “got into fights” in ing scale; individuals scoring 1 SD above the the last 12 months (0 ¼ not a problem, 1 ¼ mean were classified as experiencing infor- bit of a problem, 2 ¼ yes, a problem); study mant-rated internalizing problems (Moffitt membersratedas1or2wereclassifiedas“get- etal.,2002). tingintofights”atage32. Informantreportsofsubstanceuseproblems Official violence convictions between ages were also collected using the informant rating 26and32weremeasuredbysearchingthecom- system referenced above. Informants rated the puterized New Zealand Police database. Con- studymemberontwoitems(e.g.,“hasalcohol victionsincluded,butwerenotlimitedto:com- problems,”“hasmarijuanaorotherdrugprob- monassault,commondomesticassault,assault lems”)usinga3-pointscale(0¼no,doesnot ofchild,assault with aweapon,rape,indecent apply,1¼yes,appliessomewhat,2¼yes,cer- assault on female, robbery aggravated with a tainlyapplies). Study members rated as 1or 2 firearm,maleassaultsfemalewithweapon,re- oneitheritemwereratedasexperiencinginfor- sistingpolice,andarson. mant-rated substance use problems (Moffitt etal.,2002). Age32mentalhealth Age32physicalhealth Psychiatricdisordersduringthepastyearatage 32 were assessed in private structured inter- Cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. Because viewsusingtheDiagnosticInterviewSchedule the cohort is still too young to present clinical (DIS; Robins, Cottler, Buckholz, & Compton, endpointsofcardiovasculardisease(e.g.,myo- 1995).DiagnosesweremadeaccordingtoDSM- cardialinfarction),wefocusedonmultiplerisk- IV criteria (American Psychiatric Association, factorclusteringasameasureofcardiovascular 1994). Prevalence rates in the Dunedin cohort riskasrecommendedbychronicdiseaseepide- are similar to those from American epidemio- miologists (Grundy, Posternak, Greenland, logical surveys (Kessler, McGonagle, Swartz, Smith,&Fuster,1999;Munoz&Gange,1998). Blazer,&Nelson,1993;Newmanetal.,1996). Six biomarkers were used: overweight, high For this report, we examined grouped anxiety blood pressure, elevated total cholesterol, low disorders(generalizedanxietydisorder,obses- high-density cholesterol, elevated glycated he- sive–compulsivedisorder,panicdisorder,ago- moglobin, and low maximal oxygen uptake. raphobia, social phobia, and simple phobia), Study members were “clustered” if they had major depressive disorder, cannabis depen- atleastthreeoftheaforementionedriskfactors. dence,dependenceonotherdrugs,alcoholde- Clinical definitions and the construction of pendence,andposttraumaticstressdisorder. each measure are reported elsewhere (Caspi, Suicideattemptsinthe5yearsbetweenages Harrington,Milne,Moffitt,&Paulton,2006). 26and32weremeasuredusingaLifeHistory High-sensitivityC-reactiveprotein(hsCRP) Calendar (Belli, Shay&Stafford, 2001;Caspi isthoughtbeoneofthemostreliablemeasured etal.,1996). indicators of vascular inflammation (Ridker, Informant reports of internalizing symptoms Wilson,&Grundy,2004)andhasbeenrecently andsubstanceusewerecollectedusingtheinfor- endorsedasanadjuncttotraditionalriskfactor mantratingsystemreferencedabove.Informants screeningforcardiovascularriskbytheCenters Femaleandmaleantisocialtrajectories 681 for Disease Control and Prevention and the or more sites with (cid:2)4-mm combined attach- American Heart Association (Pearson et al., mentloss. 2004; Ridker et al., 2004). Individuals with hsCRP higher than 3.0mg/l were considered Injuries.Studymembersreportedseriousinju- at high risk (Ridker et al., 2004). Full details riesbetweenages26and32,definedasanyre- ofthismeasurearereportedelsewhere(Danese, quiringtreatmentfromadoctor,medicalcenter, Pariante,Caspi,Taylor,&Poulton,2007). or emergency services. We report the per- Respiratory function was assessed using a centagewhoexperiencedaninjuryand,among computerizedspirometerandbodyplethysmo- these individuals, the percentage with a non- graph;technicaldetailsareprovidedelsewhere sport-relatedinjury. (Tayloretal.,2002).Measurementsofvitalca- pacity (VC) were repeated to obtain at least Age32economicproblems three repeatable values (within 5%) followed by full-forced expiratory maneuvers to record SES. Study members were asked about their the forced expiratory volume in 1s (FEV ) currentormostrecentoccupation;homemakers 1 : The FEV /VC ratio is reported as the primary andthosewhowerenotworking(e.g.,students) 1 lung function measure because it is the most wereproratedbasedontheireducationalstatus sensitive measure forassessing airway remod- accordingtothecriteriaincludedinthecurrent eling in a large cohort (Rasmussen et al., New Zealand Socioeconomic Index (Davis, 2002).Studymembersalsoself-reportedsymp- Jenkin, & Coope, 2003). This information toms of chronic bronchitis: chronic coughing was coded to a 6-point scale for occupations andphlegm(Searsetal.,2003).Studymembers in New Zealand; 31% of individuals scored in who reported problems with coughing or the lowest two groups on this scale and were phlegmatage32wereclassifiedasexperienc- classifiedaslowSES. ingsymptomsofchronicbronchitis. Householdincome.Sourcesofincomewereas- Sexual health. Serologicalevidenceofinfection certained (e.g., wages, self-employment, gam- at age 32 with herpes simplex virus type 2 bling winnings, interest, rent collected, and (HSV-2), the most common cause of genital loans)andusedasanaidtocalculatetotalgross herpes, was obtained using an indirect enzyme past-yearincome.Insteadofpresentingtheraw linked immunosorbent assay (HerpeSelect 2 datainlocalcurrency,wereportthepercentage ELISA IgG; Focus Technologies, Chanhassen, of study members falling below the median MN).HSV-2infectionwasdiagnosedusingacut- splitonhouseholdincome. offvalueof3.5andanyequivocalresult(between 0.9and3.5)wasresolvedusingHSV-2Western Unemployed. Months of unemployment be- blot (Ho, Field, Irving, Packham, & Cumming- tween the ages of 26 and 32 (defined as not ham, 1993). Full details of this measure are re- working, not a student or homemaker, and portedelsewhere(Eberhart-Phillipsetal.,2001). looking for work) was recorded using a Life Smokingduringthepastyearatage32was History Calendar (Belli et al., 2001; Caspi assessed as part of the DIS (Robins et al., et al., 1996). Study members who spent 1 or 1995).Tobaccodependencewasdiagnosedac- more months unemployed between the ages cordingtoDSM-IVcriteria. of26and32wereclassifiedasunemployed. Noeducationalqualificationwasdefinedas Dental health. Examinations were conducted ending secondary education prior to receiving using calibrated dental examiners in all four qualifications,andnotreturningtoearnqualifi- quadrants of the mouth; technical procedures cations byage 32. Qualifications are based on aredescribedelsewhere(Broadbent,Thomson, nationalexamsthatalmostallstudentstakeby & Poulton, 2006; Thomson, Broadbent, Poul- age16,whichdeterminepromotioninsecond- ton, & Beck, 2006). We report the number of ary school and technical schools; passing this untreated decayed surfaces present at age 32 exam also helps secure better employment in and presence of gum disease defined as two thelabormarket (Kennedy,1981). 682 C.L.Odgersetal. Informant-rated financial problems were subgroups in light of expectations regarding collectedusingtheinformantratingsystemde- childhoodoriginsand(b)testthepredictiveva- scribedabove.Informantsratedthestudymem- lidity of the taxonomy for females and males berontwoitems(e.g.,“poormoneymanager” basedonage32outcomes. or“lackedenoughmoneytomakeendsmeet”) usinga 3-point scale (0¼not aproblem,1¼ IstheAntisocialConductProblemsScale bit of a problem, 2 ¼ yes, a problem). Study InvariantAcrossAgeandGender? members rated as 1 or 2 on either item were classified as experiencing informant-rated fi- Method nancialproblems(Moffittetal.,2002). Thefirststepingrowthmodelingistoestablish No money for food orother necessities. Study that the same construct has been measured members were asked “since you were 26, did across time. A classic example is charting the you ever find it difficult to meet the cost of rate of a child’s growth in height across age. foodandothernecessities?”(0¼no,1¼some- In this case, there is a common metric (e.g., times,2¼yes).Studymemberswhoreceiveda inches) available to objectively assess how scoreof1or2onthisitemwereclassifiedasex- muchthechildhasgrown.Whenpsychological periencing difficulty meeting the cost of food constructs are measured, however, we cannot andothernecessities. assume that the same “ruler” or metric has Homeless/taken in between ages 26 and 32 beenusedateachage.Therefore,wemustfirst was measured using a Life History Calendar. test whether the scale demonstrates MI across Study members reported periods when they ages. Establishing MI provides evidence for a were homeless or were taken in by friends or common quantitative metric and helps to en- relatives because they had no place to live sure that we are not comparing “apples” to (Wright, Caspi, Moffit, & Silva, 1998). Study “oranges” when mapping development across members who spent 1 or more months home- time(McArdle,1996). less or taken in were classified as homeless/ Invarianceacrossageisnottheonlymeasure- takenin. ment concern when interpreting results from growth-modeling analyses. It is also possible thattheAntisocialConductProblemsScaleoper- MethodsandResults atesdifferently,ordemonstratesbias,acrossmales Resultsarepresentedintwoparts.Thefirstpart versus females. Thus, to ensure that our results applies multiple-group confirmatory factor were comparable across males and females we analysis(M-GroupCFA)totestwhethertheAnti- alsotestedforMIacrossgender.Priorworkhas social Conduct Problems Scale demonstrated assumed,butnottestedfor,MIpriortomapping measurement invariance (MI) across age and developmentaltrajectoriesofantisocialbehavior. gender; that is, whether the same construct MI of the Antisocial Conduct Problems was measured (a) over time and (b) across Scale was assessed through M-Group CFA, a males and females. Technically, MI refers to technique that compares groups of individuals the invariant operation of items over time or on latent variables underlying item sets (Sor- acrosssamples;thatis,theextenttowhichitem bom,1974).M-GroupCFAhasbeenextended content is being perceived and interpreted ex- to apply to both continuous and ordered cate- actlythesamewayacrosstimeoracrossgroups gorical outcomes (Lubke & Muthe´n, 2004). (Byrne & Watkins, 2003). The second part of TodemonstrateMI,theregressionrelationsbe- the results applies GGMM to test whether the tween the observed items and the underlying antisocial subgroups anticipated by the devel- factorsareconstrainedtobeequalacrossmulti- opmentaltaxonomyemergedwithinmalesand plegroups(Meredith,1993).WhentestingMI females.Standardtechniquesfortheanalysisof acrossage,eachassessmentagewastreatedas between-groupdifferences(e.g.,analysisofvar- a separate group (see Figure 1 where Group 1 iance,logisticregressionwithplannedcontrasts) ¼ age 7, Group 2 ¼ age 9 . . .); when testing were then applied to (a) externally validate the for MI across gender, females and males were

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JONATHAN M. BROADBENT,d NIGEL DICKSON,d ROBERT J. HANCOX,d. HONALEE HARRINGTON,e RICHIE POULTON,d MALCOLM R. SEARS,f.
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