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Sarah Stoddard


sastodda@umich.edu

Journal articles

2011
Sarah A Stoddard, Marc A Zimmerman, José A Bauermeister (2011)  Thinking about the future as a way to succeed in the present: a longitudinal study of future orientation and violent behaviors among african american youth.   Am J Community Psychol 48: 3-4. 238-246 Dec  
Abstract: Previous research has linked higher levels of hopelessness about one's future to violent behavior during adolescence; however, little is known about this relationship over time for adolescents. Using growth curve modeling, we tested the association between future orientation and violent behavior across the high school years of adolescence in a sample of African American youth (n = 681). Variation based on demographic characteristics (i.e., sex, SES, previous violence) was explored. At baseline, differences in violent behavior varied by demographic characteristics. Overall, violent behavior decreased with age. Higher levels of future orientation were associated with greater decreases in violent behavior over time. Demographic characteristics were not associated with change in violent behavior overtime. Our findings suggest that future orientation can act as a promotive factor for at risk African American youth. Interventions that help support the development of future goals and aspirations could play a vital role in violence prevention efforts.
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Sarah A Stoddard, Susan J Henly, Renee E Sieving, John Bolland (2011)  Social connections, trajectories of hopelessness, and serious violence in impoverished urban youth.   J Youth Adolesc 40: 3. 278-295 Mar  
Abstract: Youth living in impoverished urban neighborhoods are at risk for becoming hopeless about their future and engaging in violent behaviors. The current study seeks to examine the longitudinal relationship between social connections, hopelessness trajectories, and subsequent violent behavior across adolescence. Our sample included 723 (49% female) African American youth living in impoverished urban neighborhoods who participated in the Mobile Youth Survey from 1998 through 2006. Using general growth mixture modeling, we found two hopelessness trajectory classes for both boys and girls during middle adolescence: a consistently low hopelessness class and an increasingly hopeless class with quadratic change. In all classes, youth who reported stronger early adolescent connections to their mothers were less hopeless at age 13. The probability of later adolescent violence with a weapon was higher for boys and was associated with the increasingly hopeless class for both boys and girls. Implications for new avenues of research and design of hope-based prevention interventions will be discussed.
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Linda H Bearinger, Renee E Sieving, Naomi N Duke, Barbara J McMorris, Sarah Stoddard, Sandra L Pettingell (2011)  Adolescent condom use consistency over time: global versus partner-specific measures.   Nurs Res 60: 3 Suppl. S68-S78 May/Jun  
Abstract: The conundrum of measuring condom use consistency, particularly with adolescents, has left researchers with a cacophony of strategies, thereby limiting comparability and interpretation.
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Sarah A Stoddard, Barbara J McMorris, Renee E Sieving (2011)  Do social connections and hope matter in predicting early adolescent violence?   Am J Community Psychol 48: 3-4. 247-256 Dec  
Abstract: We tested relationships between social connections, hope, and violence among young adolescents from socially distressed urban neighborhoods, and examined whether relationships between adolescents' family and school connectedness and violence involvement were mediated by hopefulness. Data were from middle school students involved in the Lead Peace demonstration study. The sample (N = 164) was 51.8% female; 42% African American, 28% Asian, 13% Hispanic, and 17% mixed race or other race; average age was 12.1 years; 46% reported physical fighting in the past year. In multivariate models, parent-family connectedness was protective against violence; school connectedness was marginally protective. Hopefulness was related to lower levels of violence. The relationship between school connectedness and violence was mediated by hopefulness; some evidence for mediation also existed in the family-parent connectedness and violence relationship. Findings warrant continued exploration of hopefulness as an important protective factor against violence involvement, and as a mediator in relationships between social connections and violence involvement.
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Sarah A Stoddard, Marc A Zimmerman (2011)  Association of interpersonal violence with self-reported history of head injury.   Pediatrics 127: 6. 1074-1079 Jun  
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to examine differences in interpersonal violence among individuals who reported a head injury compared with those who did not report a head injury.
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Sarah A Stoddard, Carolyn M Garcia (2011)  Hopefulness among non-U.S.-born Latino youth and young adults.   J Child Adolesc Psychiatr Nurs 24: 4. 216-222 Nov  
Abstract: U.S. Latino youths experience disproportionately high rates of health and social problems. There is a need to identify protective factors for reducing risky behaviors. Little is known about the protective nature of hope among immigrant Latino adolescents.
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