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Deconstructing Cumulative Risk: Poverty and Aspects of Instability Relate Uniquely to Young Children’s Basal Cortisol

Eleanor D. Brown, Steven J. Holochwost, Jean‐Philippe Laurenceau, Mallory L. Garnett, Kate E. Anderson

2021Child Development15 citationsDOI

Abstract

This study deconstructs cumulative risk to probe unique relations to basal cortisol for family income and four distinct aspects of poverty-related instability. Participants were 288 children aged 3-5 years who attended Head Start preschool. Parents reported on poverty risks. Children provided samples of salivary cortisol at four times of day on 6 days. Results of hierarchical linear modeling with piecewise latent growth curves representing basal cortisol indicated unique relations for family income, household chaos, neighborhood risk, attachment-disruptive residential changes, and non-attachment changes. The findings support an equifinality implied by cumulative risk models in demonstrating that multiple risks relate to cortisol dysregulation yet also suggest the utility of considering unique effects of different risks for neurophysiological stress response functioning.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyCumulative riskDevelopmental psychologyPovertyCortisol awakening responseMultilevel modelBasal (medicine)Clinical psychologyHydrocortisoneEndocrinologyInternal medicineMedicineInsulinComputer scienceEconomic growthMachine learningEconomicsStress Responses and CortisolEarly Childhood Education and DevelopmentPsychological Well-being and Life Satisfaction
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