hosted by
publicationslist.org
    
Stephen Buka

sbuka@brown.edu

Journal articles

2009
Lauren M Ellman, Robert H Yolken, Stephen L Buka, E Fuller Torrey, Tyrone D Cannon (2009)  Cognitive functioning prior to the onset of psychosis: the role of fetal exposure to serologically determined influenza infection.   Biol Psychiatry 65: 12. 1040-1047 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous studies have linked prenatal influenza exposure to increased risk of schizophrenia; however, no study has examined the neurodevelopmental sequelae of this prenatal insult before the onset of psychotic symptoms using serological evidence of infection. This study sought to examine the contribution of prenatal influenza A and B exposure to cognitive performance among children who developed psychoses in adulthood versus nonpsychiatric control children. METHODS: Subjects were 111 cases (70 with schizophrenia and 41 with affective psychoses) and 333 matched control subjects followed from gestation until age 7 through the Collaborative Perinatal Project. The Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (age 7) was administered and adult psychiatric morbidity was assessed by medical records review and confirmed by a validation study. Assays were conducted from archived prenatal maternal sera collected at birth, and influenza infection was determined by immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibody titers >75th percentile. RESULTS: Significant decreases in verbal IQ and the information subtest, as well as similar nonsignificant reductions in full scale IQ scores and vocabulary, comprehension, digit span, and picture arrangement subtests were found among cases who were prenatally exposed to influenza B versus cases who were not exposed. Fetal exposure to influenza B did not lead to any significant differences in cognitive performance among control children. CONCLUSIONS: Cumulatively, these findings suggest that a genetic and/or an environmental factor associated with psychosis rendered the fetal brain particularly vulnerable to the effects of influenza B, leading to poorer cognitive performance even before symptom onset.
Notes:
Laura R Stroud, Rachel L Paster, Matthew S Goodwin, Edmond Shenassa, Stephen Buka, Raymond Niaura, Judy F Rosenblith, Lewis P Lipsitt (2009)  Maternal smoking during pregnancy and neonatal behavior: a large-scale community study.   Pediatrics 123: 5. e842-e848 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate the influence of prospectively measured smoking during pregnancy on aspects of neonatal behavior in a large community sample. METHODS: Participants were mothers and infants from the Providence, Rhode Island, cohort of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project enrolled between 1960 and 1966. Mothers with pregnancy/medical complications and infants with medical complications and/or born premature or of low birth weight were excluded. The final sample included 962 mother-infant pairs, 23% of whom were black. Maternal smoking was measured prospectively at each prenatal visit. Neonatal behavior was assessed by using the Graham-Rosenblith Behavioral Examination of the Neonate. Items from the examination were reduced to 3 subscales: irritability, muscle tone, and response to respiratory challenge. RESULTS: Sixty-two percent of the sample reported smoking during pregnancy, with 24% of smokers reporting smoking 1 pack per day or more. We found a significant influence of maternal smoking exposure (none, moderate/less than 1 pack per day, heavy/1 pack per day or more) on irritability and muscle tone in the neonate, with exposed infants showing greater irritability and hypertonicity. Effects remained significant after controlling for significant covariates: maternal socioeconomic status, age, and race and infant birth weight and age. Posthoc tests suggested particular effects of heavy smoking on increased infant irritability and both moderate and heavy smoking exposure on increased muscle tone. CONCLUSIONS: In a large community sample, exposure to maternal smoking was associated with increased irritability and hypertonicity in neonates. Exposure to maternal smoking did not influence neonatal response to respiratory challenge. This study is the largest-scale investigation to date of the effects of maternal smoking (heavy and moderate) on examiner-assessed neonatal behavior. Given the associations between both maternal smoking and infant irritability and later behavioral dysregulation, results have important implications for early identification and intervention with at-risk offspring.
Notes:
Thermenos, Goldstein, Milanovic, Whitfield-Gabrieli, Makris, Laviolette, Koch, Faraone, Tsuang, Buka, Seidman (2009)  An fMRI study of working memory in persons with bipolar disorder or at genetic risk for bipolar disorder.   Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet May  
Abstract: First-degree relatives of persons with bipolar disorders (BDs) carry elevated risk for the illness, and manifest deficits in attention and memory (possible "endophenotypes"). However, there is only one published functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study of candidate endophenotypes in BD. We used fMRI to examine brain function in BD and in first-degree relatives performing a 2-back working memory (WM) task, and correlated brain activity with mood measures taken at the scanning session. Subjects (age 32-46) were 19 persons with BD, 18 unmedicated, non-psychotic first-degree relatives (RELs) of persons with BD, and 19 matched controls, ascertained from a long-term follow-up of a prenatal cohort study in New England. fMRI signal during 2-back and 0-back WM tasks was measured on a Siemens 1.5T MR scanner. fMRI data were analyzed using SPM-2. Persons with BD and RELs failed to suppress activation in the left anterior insula (BA 13) during WM, whereas controls suppressed activation. Compared to controls, RELs also failed to suppress activation in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and superior parietal cortex. Controls and RELs exhibited greater activation than BD individuals in the left frontopolar cortex (BA 10) during WM. Results remained significant after controlling for confounders except for mild attenuation of OFC findings. Significant correlations between brain activity, mood, and WM suggest that activity in WM circuits is affected by activity in emotion-regulatory circuits. Persons with BD and RELs exhibit altered activity in the frontopolar cortex and insula, which may represent biomarkers of genetic risk for BD. (c) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Notes:
Stephen E Gilman, Richard Rende, Julie Boergers, David B Abrams, Stephen L Buka, Melissa A Clark, Suzanne M Colby, Brian Hitsman, Alessandra N Kazura, Lewis P Lipsitt, Elizabeth E Lloyd-Richardson, Michelle L Rogers, Cassandra A Stanton, Laura R Stroud, Raymond S Niaura (2009)  Parental smoking and adolescent smoking initiation: an intergenerational perspective on tobacco control.   Pediatrics 123: 2. e274-e281 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Adolescence is an important period of risk for the development of lifelong smoking behaviors. Compelling, although inconsistent, evidence suggests a relationship between parental smoking and the risk of smoking initiation during adolescence. This study investigates unresolved issues concerning the strength and nature of the association between parent smoking and offspring smoking initiation. METHODS: We enrolled 564 adolescents aged 12 to 17, along with 1 of their parents, into the New England Family Study between 2001 and 2004. Lifetime smoking histories were obtained from parents and their adolescent offspring. Discrete-time survival analysis was used to investigate the influence of parental smoking histories on the risk of adolescent smoking initiation. RESULTS: Parental smoking was associated with a significantly higher risk of smoking initiation in adolescent offspring. In addition, the likelihood of offspring smoking initiation increased with the number of smoking parents and the duration of exposure to parental smoking, suggesting a dose-response relationship between parental smoking and offspring smoking. Offspring of parents who had quit smoking were no more likely to smoke than offspring of parents who had never smoked. The effects of parental smoking on offspring initiation differed by sex (with a stronger effect of fathers' smoking on boys than girls), developmental period (with a stronger effect of parental smoking before the adolescent was age 13 than afterward), and residence of parents (with effects of fathers' smoking being dependent on living in the same household as the adolescent). Parental smoking was also associated with stronger negative reactions to adolescents' first cigarette, a potential marker of the risk of progression to higher levels of use. CONCLUSIONS: Parental smoking is an important source of vulnerability to smoking initiation among adolescents, and parental smoking cessation might attenuate this vulnerability.
Notes:
Kerith J Conron, William Beardslee, Karestan C Koenen, Stephen L Buka, Steven L Gortmaker (2009)  A longitudinal study of maternal depression and child maltreatment in a national sample of families investigated by child protective services.   Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 163: 10. 922-930 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To assess whether a change in depression predicts a mother's change in maltreatment. DESIGN: Observational, repeated measures study. SETTING: National Survey of Child and Adolescent Well-being, 1999 to 2004. PARTICIPANTS: Mothers who retained custody of a child aged 0 to 15 years following a maltreatment investigation and completed at least 2 of 3 surveys (n = 2386). MAIN EXPOSURE: Change in depression status between baseline and 18- and 36-month follow-ups, assessed with the Composite International Diagnostic Interview Short Form. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Change in psychological aggression, physical assault, and neglect between baseline and 18- and 36-month follow-ups, assessed with the Conflict Tactics Scale Parent-Child version. RESULTS: One-third (35.5%) of mothers experienced onset or remission of depression. Onset of depression was associated with an increase of 2.3 (95% confidence interval, 0.2-4.4) psychologically aggressive acts in an average 12-month period, but was not statistically significantly associated with change in physical assault or neglect. CONCLUSION: Depression is positively associated with maternal perpetration of psychological aggression in high-risk families.
Notes:
J Maselko, S E Gilman, S Buka (2009)  Religious service attendance and spiritual well-being are differentially associated with risk of major depression.   Psychol Med 39: 6. 1009-1017 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The complex relationships between religiosity, spirituality and the risk of DSM-IV depression are not well understood. METHOD: We investigated the independent influence of religious service attendance and two dimensions of spiritual well-being (religious and existential) on the lifetime risk of major depression. Data came from the New England Family Study (NEFS) cohort (n=918, mean age=39 years). Depression according to DSM-IV criteria was ascertained using structured diagnostic interviews. Odds ratios (ORs) for the associations between high, medium and low tertiles of spiritual well-being and for religious service attendance and the lifetime risk of depression were estimated using multiple logistic regression. RESULTS: Religious service attendance was associated with 30% lower odds of depression. In addition, individuals in the top tertile of existential well-being had a 70% lower odds of depression compared to individuals in the bottom tertile. Contrary to our original hypotheses, however, higher levels of religious well-being were associated with 1.5 times higher odds of depression. CONCLUSIONS: Religious and existential well-being may be differentially associated with likelihood of depression. Given the complex interactions between religiosity and spirituality dimensions in relation to risk of major depression, the reliance on a single domain measure of religiosity or spirituality (e.g. religious service attendance) in research or clinical settings is discouraged.
Notes:
Angie L Cradock, Ichiro Kawachi, Graham A Colditz, Steven L Gortmaker, Stephen L Buka (2009)  Neighborhood social cohesion and youth participation in physical activity in Chicago.   Soc Sci Med 68: 3. 427-435 Feb  
Abstract: Many young people do not meet recommended levels of participation in physical activity. Neighborhoods may play a role in supporting healthy behavior via social and physical environmental features. We examine whether neighborhood-levels of social cohesion, range of youth services and educational attainment were associated with participation in recreational programs and general physical activity among young people. Hierarchical regression analyses were carried out using data from 680 young people (ages 11-15 years at baseline) participating in the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods. The participants' primary caregiver reported recreational program participation at baseline and self-reported general physical activity were assessed at follow-up 2-3 years later. Neighborhood-level characteristics were obtained from census data and via a community survey. Neighborhood social cohesion was inversely associated with participation in recreational programs at baseline, controlling for availability of neighborhood services for youth, neighborhood education status, race/ethnicity, individual-level parental education, overweight status, sex, and age. Residing in an area with greater social cohesion was directly associated with frequency of reported general physical activity, independent of previously reported participation in recreational programs and other neighborhood and individual-level covariates. The present findings suggest that neighborhood social cohesion influences participation in physical activity.
Notes:
Lewinn, Stroud, Molnar, Ware, Koenen, Buka (2009)  Elevated maternal cortisol levels during pregnancy are associated with reduced childhood IQ.   Int J Epidemiol May  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: In animal models, there is evidence to suggest a causal link between maternal cortisol levels during pregnancy and offspring outcomes; however, evidence for this relationship in humans is inconclusive. We address important confounders of this association by estimating the relationship between maternal cortisol levels in late pregnancy and childhood IQ in a birth cohort and in a subsample of siblings. METHODS: This study included 832 children who were members of the Collaborative Perinatal Project. Maternal serum collected between 1959 and 1966 during the third trimester of pregnancy was analysed for free cortisol. We investigated the relationship between maternal cortisol in quintiles and full, verbal and performance scale scores on the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children at age 7 years, adjusting for prenatal and family characteristics. We repeated this analysis among 74 discordant sibling pairs using a fixed effects approach, which adjusts for shared family characteristics. RESULTS: Maternal cortisol levels were negatively related to full-scale IQ, an effect driven by verbal IQ scores. Compared with those in the lowest quintile of cortisol exposure, the verbal IQ of children in the highest quintile of exposure was 3.83 points lower [95% confidence interval (CI): -6.44 to -1.22]. Within sibling pairs, being in the highest quintile of exposure was associated with verbal IQ scores 5.5 points lower (95% CI: -11.24 to 0.31) compared with the other quintiles. CONCLUSION: These findings are consistent with prior human and animal studies, and suggest that exposure to high levels of maternal cortisol during pregnancy may be negatively related to offspring cognitive skills independently of family attributes that characterize the postnatal environment.
Notes:
Sukanta Saha, Adrian G Barnett, Claire Foldi, Thomas H Burne, Darryl W Eyles, Stephen L Buka, John J McGrath (2009)  Advanced paternal age is associated with impaired neurocognitive outcomes during infancy and childhood.   PLoS Med 6: 3. Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Advanced paternal age (APA) is associated with an increased risk of neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and schizophrenia, as well as with dyslexia and reduced intelligence. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between paternal age and performance on neurocognitive measures during infancy and childhood. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A sample of singleton children (n = 33,437) was drawn from the US Collaborative Perinatal Project. The outcome measures were assessed at 8 mo, 4 y, and 7 y (Bayley scales, Stanford Binet Intelligence Scale, Graham-Ernhart Block Sort Test, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, Wide Range Achievement Test). The main analyses examined the relationship between neurocognitive measures and paternal or maternal age when adjusted for potential confounding factors. Advanced paternal age showed significant associations with poorer scores on all of the neurocognitive measures apart from the Bayley Motor score. The findings were broadly consistent in direction and effect size at all three ages. In contrast, advanced maternal age was generally associated with better scores on these same measures. CONCLUSIONS: The offspring of older fathers show subtle impairments on tests of neurocognitive ability during infancy and childhood. In light of secular trends related to delayed fatherhood, the clinical implications and the mechanisms underlying these findings warrant closer scrutiny.
Notes:
Xiao, Buka, Cannon, Suzuki, Viscidi, Torrey, Yolken (2009)  Serological pattern consistent with infection with type I Toxoplasma gondii in mothers and risk of psychosis among adult offspring.   Microbes Infect Jul  
Abstract: Previous studies have shown that maternal antibodies to Toxoplasma measured during pregnancy are associated with an increased risk of schizophrenia and other psychoses in adult offspring. Recently, it has been recognized that different genotypes of Toxoplasma have distinct neuropathogenic potential. The objective of this study was to investigate whether parasite genotype is a contributing factor to disease risk. We have developed an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) that uses polymorphic polypeptides specific to the three clonal parasite lineages and derived from three dense granule antigens, GRA5, GRA6 and GRA7. We used this assay to measure type-specific antibodies in the sera from 219 pregnant women whose children developed schizophrenia and affective psychotic illnesses in adult life, and 618 matched unaffected control mothers from three cohorts of the Collaborative Perinatal Project. We found that the offspring of mothers with a serological pattern consistent with Toxoplasma type capital I, Ukrainian infection were at significantly increased risk for the development of psychoses as compared with the matched unaffected control mothers (odds ratio=1.94; 95% confidence interval=1.08-3.46; p=0.03). The risk was particularly elevated for affective psychoses (OR=5.24; 95% CI=1.67-16.5; p=0.005). In contrast, we did not find an association between maternal antibodies to other genotypes and risk of psychoses in the offspring. These findings suggest an influence of the parasite genotype on increased risk of psychosis and provide further support for a substantive role of Toxoplasma in the etiology of psychosis.
Notes:
Margie Skeer, Marie C McCormick, Sharon-Lise T Normand, Stephen L Buka, Stephen E Gilman (2009)  A prospective study of familial conflict, psychological stress, and the development of substance use disorders in adolescence.   Drug Alcohol Depend 104: 1-2. 65-72 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Exposure to adverse family environments in childhood can influence the risk trajectory for developing substance use disorders in adolescence. Evidence for this is largely based on cross-sectional studies which have been unable to establish the temporality of this association and investigate underlying pathways. METHODS: The sample consisted of 1421 adolescents from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods, a three wave longitudinal study conducted between 1994 and 2001 that followed children from ages 10 to 22. Logistic regression analyses with multiple imputation were conducted to examine the relation between familial conflict in childhood and substance use disorders in late adolescence and emerging adulthood. We conducted mediational analyses to determine if internalizing and externalizing problems explain this relationship, and we investigated whether external social support mitigates the adverse effects of familial conflict on the development of substance use disorders. RESULTS: Familial conflict was significantly associated with the risk of substance use disorders during adolescence (odds ratio: 1.23; 95% CI: 1.02-1.47), and 30% of this effect was due to higher levels of externalizing problems (but not internalizing problems). External social support in childhood did not buffer the effects of familial conflict on substance use disorders during adolescence. CONCLUSION: Exposure to familial conflict early in life increases the risk of substance use disorders during late adolescence and emerging adulthood, due partly to higher levels of externalizing problems, but not internalizing problems. Future research is needed to identify additional pathways underlying this association, and the extent to which these pathways are modifiable.
Notes:
Saha, Barnett, Buka, McGrath (2009)  Maternal age and paternal age are associated with distinct childhood behavioural outcomes in a general population birth cohort.   Schizophr Res Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Recent studies show that advanced paternal age (APA) is associated with an increased risk of neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. A body of evidence also suggests that individuals who develop schizophrenia show subtle deviations in a range of behavioural domains during their childhood. The aim of the study was to examine the relationship between paternal and maternal ages and selected behavioural measures in children using a large birth cohort. METHOD: Participants were singleton children (n=21,753) drawn from the US Collaborative Perinatal Project. The outcome measures were assessed at 7years. The main analyses examined the relationship between parental age and behavioural measures when adjusted for a range of potentially confounding variables, including age of the other parent, maternal race, socio-economic measures, sex, gestation length, maternal marital status, parental mental illness, and child's age-at-testing. RESULTS: Advanced paternal age was associated with a significantly increased risk of adverse 'externalizing' behaviours at age seven years. For every five year increase in paternal age, the odds of higher 'externalizing' behaviours was increased by 12% (OR=1.12; 95% CI=1.03, 1.21, p<0.0001). The relationship persisted after adjusting for potential confounding factors. 'Internalizing' behavioural outcome was not associated with advanced paternal age. In contrast, advanced maternal age was significantly protective against adverse 'externalizing' behavioural outcomes, but associated with an increased risk of adverse 'internalizing' behavioural outcomes. DISCUSSION: The offspring of older fathers show a distinctly different pattern of behaviours compared to the offspring of older mothers. The diverse socio-cultural and biologically-mediated factors that underpin these findings remain to be clarified. In light of secular trends related to delayed parenthood, the mechanisms underlying these findings warrant closer scrutiny.
Notes:
Hannah Gardener, Donna Spiegelman, Stephen L Buka (2009)  Prenatal risk factors for autism: comprehensive meta-analysis.   Br J Psychiatry 195: 1. 7-14 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The aetiology of autism is unknown, although prenatal exposures have been the focus of epidemiological research for over 40 years. AIMS: To provide the first quantitative review and meta-analysis of the association between maternal pregnancy complications and pregnancy-related factors and risk of autism. METHOD: PubMed, Embase and PsycINFO databases were searched for epidemiological studies that examined the association between pregnancy-related factors and autism. Forty studies were eligible for inclusion in the meta-analysis. Summary effect estimates were calculated for factors examined in multiple studies. RESULTS: Over 50 prenatal factors have been examined. The factors associated with autism risk in the meta-analysis were advanced parental age at birth, maternal prenatal medication use, bleeding, gestational diabetes, being first born v. third or later, and having a mother born abroad. The factors with the strongest evidence against a role in autism risk included previous fetal loss and maternal hypertension, proteinuria, pre-eclampsia and swelling. CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient evidence to implicate any one prenatal factor in autism aetiology, although there is some evidence to suggest that exposure to pregnancy complications may increase the risk.
Notes:
E Fuller Torrey, Stephen Buka, Tyrone D Cannon, Jill M Goldstein, Larry J Seidman, Tianli Liu, Trevor Hadley, Isabelle M Rosso, Carrie Bearden, Robert H Yolken (2009)  Paternal age as a risk factor for schizophrenia: how important is it?   Schizophr Res 114: 1-3. 1-5 Oct  
Abstract: Advanced paternal age has been widely cited as a risk factor for schizophrenia among offspring and even claimed to account for one-quarter of all cases. We carried out a new study on 25,025 offspring from the Collaborative Perinatal Project (CPP), including 168 diagnosed with psychosis and 88 with narrowly defined schizophrenia. We also conducted a meta-analysis of this and nine other studies for which comparable age-cohort data were available. The mean paternal age for the CPP cases was slightly, but not significantly, higher than the matched controls (p=0.28). Meta-analyses including these new results were conducted to determine the relative risk associated with alternative definitions of advanced paternal age (35, 45 or 55 years and older). These yielded pooled odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals of 1.28 (1.10, 1.48), 1.38 (0.95, 2.01) and 2.22 (1.46, 3.37), respectively. Thus, increased paternal age appears to be a risk factor for schizophrenia primarily among offspring of fathers ages 55 and over. In these 10 studies, such fathers accounted for only 0.6% of all births. Compared with other known risk factors for schizophrenia, advanced paternal age appears to be intermediate in magnitude. Advanced paternal age is also known to be a risk factor for some chromosomal and neoplastic diseases in the offspring where the cause is thought to be chromosomal aberrations and mutations of the aging germline. Similar mechanisms may account for the relationship between advanced paternal age and schizophrenia risk.
Notes:
Christopher W Kahler, Stacey B Daughters, Adam M Leventhal, Michelle L Rogers, Melissa A Clark, Suzanne M Colby, Julie Boergers, Susan E Ramsey, David B Abrams, Raymond Niaura, Stephen L Buka (2009)  Personality, psychiatric disorders, and smoking in middle-aged adults.   Nicotine Tob Res 11: 7. 833-841 Jul  
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: A number of personality traits have been associated with cigarette smoking. Current smokers generally show higher levels of negative emotionality and lower levels of behavioral constraint than former smokers and those who never smoked. However, prior investigations have not examined thoroughly whether these smoking-personality associations are unique to smoking status or simply reflect the fact that these personality traits tend to be elevated across numerous forms of psychopathology. Likewise, prior studies have not addressed whether personality shows differential associations with smoking based on the presence or absence of lifetime psychiatric disorders. METHODS: The present study examined these questions using data from 472 current, 311 former, and 324 never-smokers aged 34-44 years. RESULTS: Current smokers reported being more reactive to stress, more aggressive, more alienated, and less harm avoidant than both former smokers and never-smokers, whereas former smokers and never-smokers showed similar personality profiles overall. Psychiatric disorder history did not interact with smoking status in predicting personality. Controlling for differences in four major lifetime psychiatric disorders (major depression, alcohol dependence, drug dependence, and conduct disorder) reduced the differences in personality traits associated with smoking status. However, smoking status continued to relate uniquely and significantly to higher levels of negative emotionality and behavioral under control with the most robust effect observed for trait alienation. DISCUSSION: These results provide the most comprehensive depiction to date of interrelations among personality, psychopathology, and smoking and suggest an important role of personality in smoking that is not redundant with or conditional upon lifetime psychopathology.
Notes:
Laura D Kubzansky, Laurie T Martin, Stephen L Buka (2009)  Early manifestations of personality and adult health: a life course perspective.   Health Psychol 28: 3. 364-372 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to investigate whether individual personality or temperamental qualities that emerge early and persist over the life course, predict adult midlife health. Specific childhood personality attributes considered include distress proneness, behavioral inhibition, and ability to stay focused on a task. DESIGN: Prospective data are from 569 individuals followed from birth into adulthood. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Outcomes include two different measures of adult health: self-rated general health, and number of illnesses in adulthood. RESULTS: Childhood personality attributes related to attention and distress were significantly associated with adult health, with stronger effects evident among women. Children with high attention reported better self-rated health (b = 0.12, p < .05) and fewer illnesses (b = -0.09, p < .01) as adults; more distress-prone children reported worse self-rated health (b = -0.15, p < .05) and more illnesses (b = 0.07, p < .09) as adults. CONCLUSION: Associations between child personality attributes with both general self-rated health and number of illnesses in adulthood were maintained after taking account of childhood social environment and child health. Findings indicate that early emerging personality and related processes influence adult physical health, and suggest the potential value of interventions targeting early life development.
Notes:
Edmond D Shenassa, Amanda L Graham, Jasmina A Burdzovic, Stephen L Buka (2009)  Psychometric properties of the Wisconsin Inventory of Smoking Dependence Motives (WISDM-68): a replication and extension.   Nicotine Tob Res 11: 8. 1002-1010 Aug  
Abstract: Introduction The Wisconsin Inventory of Smoking Dependence Motives (WISDM-68), a relatively new measure, assesses nicotine dependence in terms of distinct motivations for smoking. We examined psychometric properties of the WISDM-68 in a population-based sample that is on average older and includes heavier smokers than the original sample used for the validation of the instrument. Methods Participants were adult regular smokers (N = 431) who were offspring of pregnant women enrolled in the New England sites of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project (1959-1966). We examined the internal consistency of the WISDM-68's 13 subscales, replicated and extended the confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) by Piper et al., assessed the interdependence of the subscales, examined the association between smoking heaviness and subscale scores, and conducted additional validation tests. Results Internal consistency for WISDM's 13 subscales ranged from 0.78 for the Tolerance to 0.89 for the Cognitive Enhancement and Affiliative Attachment subscales. Similar reliabilities were obtained for demographic and smoking-relevant subgroups. CFAs suggest that a 13-factor model fit our data better than a single-factor model and better than an empirically derived 10-factor model. Regression models supported the validity of the 13 subscales, although follow-up analyses suggested possibility of maintaining WISDM's 13-factor structure with fewer than 68 items. Conclusion The WISDM-68 consists of 13 internally consistent subscales. The independence of the majority of the subscales supports the perspective that nicotine dependence is a heterogeneous construct.
Notes:
2008
Christopher W Kahler, David R Strong, George D Papandonatos, Suzanne M Colby, Melissa A Clark, Julie Boergers, Raymond Niaura, David B Abrams, Stephen L Buka (2008)  Cigarette smoking and the lifetime alcohol involvement continuum.   Drug Alcohol Depend 93: 1-2. 111-120 Jan  
Abstract: Greater understanding of how alcohol use relates to the initiation, progression, and persistence of cigarette smoking is of great significance for efforts to prevent and treat smoking and excessive drinking and their substantial combined iatrogenic effects on health. Studies investigating the relationship between levels of alcohol involvement and smoking have typically been limited by analytic approaches that treat drinking behavior and alcohol use disorder diagnoses as separate phenomena rather than as indicators of a single latent alcohol involvement dimension. The purposes of the present study were (a) to create a lifetime index of alcohol involvement that integrates information about alcohol consumption and alcohol problems into a single measure and (b) to relate this index to initiation of smoking, progression from initiation to daily smoking, progression from initiation to dependence, and persistence of smoking. Rasch model analyses of data from 1508 middle-aged (34-44 years) adults showed that creating an additive index of lifetime alcohol involvement was psychometrically supported. Significant quadratic effects of alcohol involvement on initiation, progression, and persistence of smoking demonstrated that there were specific regions of the alcohol involvement continuum that were particularly strongly related to increased smoking. These results provide the most comprehensive depiction to date of the nature of the relationship between lifetime alcohol involvement and lifetime cigarette smoking and suggest potential avenues for research on the etiology and maintenance of smoking and tobacco dependence.
Notes:
Stephen L Buka, Tyrone D Cannon, E Fuller Torrey, Robert H Yolken (2008)  Maternal exposure to herpes simplex virus and risk of psychosis among adult offspring.   Biol Psychiatry 63: 8. 809-815 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Viral exposure during gestation is thought to be a risk factor for schizophrenia. Previous studies have indicated that prenatal exposure to herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) may be a risk for the subsequent development of schizophrenia in some populations. In this investigation, we tested a large and diverse population to assess the risk of psychoses among offspring of mothers with serological evidence of HSV-2 infection. METHODS: We conducted a nested case-control study of 200 adults with psychoses and 554 matched control subjects (matched for city and date of birth, race/ethnicity, gender, and parent history of treatment for mental disorder) from three cohorts of the Collaborative Perinatal Project (Boston, Providence, and Philadelphia). We analyzed stored serum samples that had been obtained from these mothers at the end of pregnancy for antibodies directed at HSV-2, using type-specific solid-phase enzyme immunoassay techniques. RESULTS: Offspring of mothers with serologic evidence of HSV-2 infection were at significantly increased risk for the development of psychoses (odds ratio [OR] = 1.6; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.1-2.3). This risk was particularly elevated among women with high rates of sexual activity during pregnancy (OR = 2.6; 95% CI = 1.4-4.6). CONCLUSIONS: Maternal exposure to herpes simplex virus type 2 is associated with an increased risk for psychoses among adult offspring. These results are consistent with a general model of risk resulting from enhanced maternal immune activation during pregnancy.
Notes:
Stephen E Gilman, Laurie T Martin, David B Abrams, Ichiro Kawachi, Laura Kubzansky, Eric B Loucks, Richard Rende, Rima Rudd, Stephen L Buka (2008)  Educational attainment and cigarette smoking: a causal association?   Int J Epidemiol 37: 3. 615-624 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Despite abundant evidence that lower education is associated with a higher risk of smoking, whether the association is causal has not been convincingly established. METHODS: We investigated the association between education and lifetime smoking patterns in a birth cohort established in 1959 and followed through adulthood (n = 1311). We controlled for a wide range of potential confounders that were measured prior to school entry, and also estimated sibling fixed effects models to control for unmeasured familial vulnerability to smoking. RESULTS: In the full sample of participants, regression analyses adjusting for multiple childhood factors (including socioeconomic status, IQ, behavioural problems, and medical conditions) indicated that the number of pack-years smoked was higher among individuals with less than high school education [rate ratio (RR) = 1.58, confidence interval (CI) = 1.31, 1.91]. However, in the sibling fixed effects analysis the RR was 1.23 (CI = 0.80, 1.93). Similarly, adjusted models estimated in the full sample showed that individuals with less than high school education had fewer short-term (RR = 0.40; CI = 0.23, 0.69) and long-term (RR = 0.59; CI = 0.42, 0.83) quit attempts, and were less likely to quit smoking (odds ratio = 0.34; CI = 0.19, 0.62). The effects of education on quitting smoking were attenuated in the sibling fixed effects models that controlled for familial vulnerability to smoking. CONCLUSIONS: A substantial portion of the education differential in smoking that has been repeatedly observed is attributable to factors shared by siblings that contribute to shortened educational careers and to lifetime smoking trajectories. Reducing disparities in cigarette smoking, including educational disparities, may therefore require approaches that focus on factors early in life that influence smoking risk over the adult life span.
Notes:
Joanna Maselko, Stephen Buka (2008)  Religious activity and lifetime prevalence of psychiatric disorder.   Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 43: 1. 18-24 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: There is growing evidence that current religious activity is associated with less psychological distress, yet research on clinical levels of psychopathology along with lifetime patterns of religious activity remains limited. METHOD: In this study, we used data on 718 participants from the Providence, RI, cohort of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project, to test for the association between lifetime patterns of religious service attendance frequency, subjective religiosity, and lifetime psychiatric diagnosis. RESULTS: For women, but not men, a changing pattern of service attendance (having stopped or started attending services since childhood) was associated with increased lifetime rates of generalized anxiety, and marginally increased rates of alcohol abuse/dependence (OR for generalized anxiety: 2.71, 95% CI: 1.11-6.62; OR for alcohol abuse/dependence=1.97, 95% CI: 0.92-4.20) compared to a stable pattern of continuous religious service attendance. Conversely, men who changed their frequency of religious service attendance were less likely to have ever met diagnostic criteria for major depression (OR=0.50, 95% CI: 0.31-0.83) as compared to those who had always been religiously active. The rates of psychiatric illness among those who reported never attending religious services were not statistically different from those who either had always been religiously active or those who reported changing patterns of attendance. CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that lifetime religious activity patterns are associated with psychiatric illnesses, with different patterns observed for men and women.
Notes:
Nikos Makris, Stephen L Buka, Joseph Biederman, George M Papadimitriou, Steven M Hodge, Eve M Valera, Ariel B Brown, George Bush, Michael C Monuteaux, Verne S Caviness, David N Kennedy, Larry J Seidman (2008)  Attention and executive systems abnormalities in adults with childhood ADHD: A DT-MRI study of connections.   Cereb Cortex 18: 5. 1210-1220 May  
Abstract: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is hypothesized to be due, in part, to structural defects in brain networks influencing cognitive, affective, and motor behaviors. Although the current literature on fiber tracts is limited in ADHD, gray matter abnormalities suggest that white matter (WM) connections may be altered selectively in neural systems. A prior study (Ashtari et al. 2005), using diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DT-MRI), showed alterations within the frontal and cerebellar WM in children and adolescents with ADHD. In this study of adults with childhood ADHD, we hypothesized that fiber pathways subserving attention and executive functions (EFs) would be altered. To this end, the cingulum bundle (CB) and superior longitudinal fascicle II (SLF II) were investigated in vivo in 12 adults with childhood ADHD and 17 demographically comparable unaffected controls using DT-MRI. Relative to controls, the fractional anisotropy (FA) values were significantly smaller in both regions of interest in the right hemisphere, in contrast to a control region (the fornix), indicating an alteration of anatomical connections within the attention and EF cerebral systems in adults with childhood ADHD. The demonstration of FA abnormalities in the CB and SLF II in adults with childhood ADHD provides further support for persistent structural abnormalities into adulthood.
Notes:
Tamar Mendelson, Laura D Kubzansky, Geetanjali D Datta, Stephen L Buka (2008)  Relation of female gender and low socioeconomic status to internalizing symptoms among adolescents: a case of double jeopardy?   Soc Sci Med 66: 6. 1284-1296 Mar  
Abstract: Characteristics associated with disadvantaged social position, such as low socioeconomic status (SES) and female gender, may play a significant role in the development of internalizing symptoms among adolescents. Indeed, theories of "double jeopardy" suggest that these disadvantaged status characteristics interact to produce particularly harmful mental health outcomes. We tested the hypothesis that lower SES places adolescent females at greater risk for internalizing symptoms than males. We used data from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods collected from a 15-year-old adolescent cohort (n=640) at baseline and at two-year follow-up. Female gender predicted internalizing symptoms cross-sectionally and prospectively, whereas household income and caretaker education generally were not associated with internalizing symptoms. Findings overall did not indicate interactive effects between gender and SES indicators. However, subgroups of females at the lowest levels of caretaker education and household income displayed increased risk for specific outcomes, including higher internalizing symptom levels at follow-up and maintenance of severe symptom levels from baseline to follow-up.
Notes:
Beth E Molnar, Magdalena Cerda, Andrea L Roberts, Stephen L Buka (2008)  Effects of neighborhood resources on aggressive and delinquent behaviors among urban youths.   Am J Public Health 98: 6. 1086-1093 Jun  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: We sought to identify neighborhood-level resources associated with lower levels of aggression and delinquency among youths aged 9-15 years at baseline after accounting for risk factors and other types of resources. METHODS: Data were derived from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods, which focused on 2226 ethnically diverse, urban youths, their caregivers, and the 80 neighborhoods in which they resided at baseline. RESULTS: Living in a neighborhood with a higher concentration of organizations or services serving young people and adults was associated with lower levels of aggression (odds ratio [OR]=0.9; 95% confidence interval [CI]=0.8, 1.0); living in such a neighborhood also moderated family, peer, and mentor resources. For example, the presence of well-behaved peers was associated with lower levels of aggression among youths living in neighborhoods where the concentration of organizations and services was at least 1 standard deviation above the mean; the association was less strong among youths living in neighborhoods with organizations and services 1 standard deviation below the mean or less. CONCLUSIONS: Certain family, peer, and mentoring resources may confer benefits only in the presence of neighborhood resources. Increasing neighborhood resources should be considered in interventions designed to reduce urban youths' involvement in violence.
Notes:
J Biederman, N Makris, E M Valera, M C Monuteaux, J M Goldstein, S Buka, D L Boriel, S Bandyopadhyay, D N Kennedy, V S Caviness, G Bush, M Aleardi, P Hammerness, S V Faraone, L J Seidman (2008)  Towards further understanding of the co-morbidity between attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and bipolar disorder: a MRI study of brain volumes.   Psychol Med 38: 7. 1045-1056 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Although attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and bipolar disorder (BPD) co-occur frequently and represent a particularly morbid clinical form of both disorders, neuroimaging research addressing this co-morbidity is scarce. Our aim was to evaluate the morphometric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) underpinnings of the co-morbidity of ADHD with BPD, testing the hypothesis that subjects with this co-morbidity would have neuroanatomical correlates of both disorders. METHOD: Morphometric MRI findings were compared between 31 adults with ADHD and BPD and with those of 18 with BPD, 26 with ADHD, and 23 healthy controls. The volumes (cm(3)) of our regions of interest (ROIs) were estimated as a function of ADHD status, BPD status, age, sex, and omnibus brain volume using linear regression models. RESULTS: When BPD was associated with a significantly smaller orbital prefrontal cortex and larger right thalamus, this pattern was found in co-morbid subjects with ADHD plus BPD. Likewise, when ADHD was associated with significantly less neocortical gray matter, less overall frontal lobe and superior prefrontal cortex volumes, a smaller right anterior cingulate cortex and less cerebellar gray matter, so did co-morbid ADHD plus BPD subjects. CONCLUSIONS: Our results support the hypothesis that ADHD and BPD independently contribute to volumetric alterations of selective and distinct brain structures. In the co-morbid state of ADHD plus BPD, the profile of brain volumetric abnormalities consists of structures that are altered in both disorders individually. Attention to co-morbidity is necessary to help clarify the heterogeneous neuroanatomy of both BPD and ADHD.
Notes:
Magdalena Cerdá, Stephen L Buka, Janet W Rich-Edwards (2008)  Neighborhood influences on the association between maternal age and birthweight: a multilevel investigation of age-related disparities in health.   Soc Sci Med 66: 9. 2048-2060 May  
Abstract: It was hypothesized that the relationship between maternal age and infant birthweight varies significantly across neighborhoods and that such variation can be predicted by neighborhood characteristics. We analyzed 229,613 singleton births of mothers aged 20-45 years from Chicago, USA in 1997-2002. Random coefficient models were used to estimate the between-neighborhood variation in age-birthweight slopes, and both intercepts- and-slopes-as-outcomes models were used to evaluate area-level predictors of such variation. The crude maternal age-birthweight slopes for neighborhoods ranged from a decrease of 17 g to an increase of 10 g per year of maternal age. Adjustment for individual-level covariates reduced but did not eliminate this between-neighborhood variation. Concentrated poverty was a significant neighborhood-level predictor of the age-birthweight slope, explaining 44.4% of the between-neighborhood variation in slopes. Neighborhoods of higher economic disadvantage showed a more negative age-birthweight slope. The findings support the hypothesis that the relationship between maternal age and birthweight varies between neighborhoods. Indicators of neighborhood disadvantage help to explain such differences.
Notes:
Renee D Goodwin, Stephen L Buka (2008)  Childhood respiratory disease and the risk of anxiety disorder and major depression in adulthood.   Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 162: 8. 774-780 Aug  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between early childhood respiratory disease and the risk of anxiety and depression in adulthood. DESIGN: Cohort study. SETTING: Providence cohort of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project. PARTICIPANTS: Offspring of 1062 mothers selected for follow-up from birth through adulthood. MAIN EXPOSURE: Childhood respiratory disease. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Odds of developing anxiety and depression by age 34 years. RESULTS: Respiratory disease in childhood was associated with an elevated risk of receiving treatment for anxiety disorders but not mood disorders. Specifically, higher respiratory rate at age 4 months was associated with significantly increased odds of receiving treatment for anxiety by age 34 years (odds ratio, 2.2; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-4.4; P < .05). Respiratory disease at age 1 year was associated with significantly increased odds of receiving treatment for anxiety (odds ratio, 2.8; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-6.5; P = .04). In addition, having respiratory disease at age 1 year only was associated with increased odds of receiving treatment for anxiety (odds ratio, 3.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.1-8.7; P < .05), whereas having both respiratory disease at age 1 year and suspect (parent reported but not physician diagnosed) respiratory disease at age 7 years was associated with the greatest odds of receiving treatment for anxiety (odds ratio, 19.8; 95% confidence interval, 2.8-141.9; P < .05). CONCLUSIONS: These results are consistent with and extend previous findings and provide prospective evidence of a link between respiratory disease in early childhood and increased risk of anxiety disorders by age 34 years. These findings may have implications for prevention or early intervention with groups at high risk for anxiety disorders.
Notes:
Magdalena Cerdá, Brisa N Sánchez, Sandro Galea, Melissa Tracy, Stephen L Buka (2008)  Estimating co-occurring behavioral trajectories within a neighborhood context: a case study of multivariate transition models for clustered data.   Am J Epidemiol 168: 10. 1190-1203 Nov  
Abstract: Comorbidity is well-documented in psychiatric and risk behavior epidemiology. The authors present a novel application of clustered multivariate transition models to study comorbidity within a clustered context. The authors used data from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods (1995-2002) to assess trajectories in substance use, problems with police, and antisocial behavior among 1,517 participants in 80 neighborhoods followed from ages 12-15 years through ages 18-21 years. The authors used pairwise odds ratios to quantify behavior comorbidity at the individual and neighborhood levels. Risk behaviors co-occurred within individuals at specific points in time: antisocial behavior and substance use were 3.37 times more likely to co-occur within an individual at wave 1, as compared with the co-occurrence of any 2 behaviors from different individuals, while substance use and police problems were 2.94 times more likely to co-occur than substance use and antisocial behavior at wave 2. The authors also evaluated sequential comorbidity. Antisocial behavior was sequentially comorbid with substance use and police problems: 31% of youths who had reported antisocial behavior at baseline reported police problems or drug use at wave 2. These models can prove instrumental in answering the persistent questions about possible sequential relations among problem behaviors.
Notes:
Mark G A Opler, Stephen L Buka, Justina Groeger, Ian McKeague, Catherine Wei, Pam Factor-Litvak, Michaeline Bresnahan, Joseph Graziano, Jill M Goldstein, Larry J Seidman, Alan S Brown, Ezra S Susser (2008)  Prenatal exposure to lead, delta-aminolevulinic acid, and schizophrenia: further evidence.   Environ Health Perspect 116: 11. 1586-1590 Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: A previously conducted study of prenatal lead exposure and schizophrenia using delta-aminolevulinic acid, a biologic marker of Pb exposure, in archived maternal serum samples collected from subjects enrolled in the Childhood Health and Development Study (1959-1966) based in Oakland, California, suggested a possible association between prenatal Pb exposure and the development of schizophrenia in later life. OBJECTIVES: In the present study we extend these findings using samples collected from the New England cohort of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project (1959-1966). Using similar methods, in this study we found results that suggest a comparable association in this cohort. METHODS: We pooled matched sets of cases and controls from both the California and New England sites using a multilevel random-intercept logistic regression model, accounting for matching and site structure as well as adjusting for maternal age at delivery and maternal education. RESULTS: The estimated odds ratio for schizophrenia associated with exposure corresponding to 15 microg/dL of blood Pb was 1.92 (95% confidence interval, 1.05-3.87; p = 0.03). CONCLUSION: Although several limitations constrain generalizability, these results are consistent with previous findings and provide further evidence for the role of early environmental exposures in the development of adult-onset psychiatric disorders.
Notes:
Stephen E Gilman, Hannah Gardener, Stephen L Buka (2008)  Maternal smoking during pregnancy and children's cognitive and physical development: a causal risk factor?   Am J Epidemiol 168: 5. 522-531 Sep  
Abstract: There remains considerable debate regarding the effects of maternal smoking during pregnancy on children's growth and development. Evidence that exposure to maternal smoking during pregnancy is associated with numerous adverse outcomes is contradicted by research suggesting that these associations are spurious. The authors investigated the relation between maternal smoking during pregnancy and 14 developmental outcomes of children from birth through age 7 years, using data from the Collaborative Perinatal Project (1959-1974; n = 52,919). In addition to adjusting for potential confounders measured contemporaneously with maternal smoking, the authors fitted conditional fixed-effects models among siblings that controlled for unmeasured confounders. Results from the conditional analyses indicated a birth weight difference of -85.63 g associated with smoking of >or=20 cigarettes daily during pregnancy (95% confidence interval: -131.91, -39.34) and 2.73 times' higher odds of being overweight at age 7 years (95% confidence interval: 1.30, 5.71). However, the associations between maternal smoking and 12 other outcomes studied (including Apgar score, intelligence, academic achievement, conduct problems, and asthma) were entirely eliminated after adjustment for measured and unmeasured confounders. The authors conclude that the hypothesized effects of maternal smoking during pregnancy on these outcomes either are not present or are not distinguishable from a broader range of familial factors associated with maternal smoking.
Notes:
Tyrone D Cannon, Robert Yolken, Stephen Buka, E Fuller Torrey (2008)  Decreased neurotrophic response to birth hypoxia in the etiology of schizophrenia.   Biol Psychiatry 64: 9. 797-802 Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Obstetric complications, particularly fetal hypoxia, are associated with increased risk for schizophrenia later in life. Such factors are also related to increased severity of certain neuropathological features of schizophrenia, including hippocampal and cortical gray matter reduction, among individuals with a genetic susceptibility to the disorder. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying these associations are unknown. Here, we sought to determine whether neurotrophic factors, which are stimulated as part of a neuroprotective response to fetal distress, are differentially expressed in cord blood samples at the time of birth following fetal hypoxia, maternal hypertension/small for gestational age status, and/or prematurity among individuals who developed schizophrenia as adults, as compared with control subjects. METHODS: One hundred eleven cases with psychotic disorders (70 with schizophrenia) and 333 control subjects matched for gender, race, and date of birth were drawn from the Philadelphia cohort of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project in a nested case-control study. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) was assayed from cord and maternal blood samples taken at delivery and stored at -20 degrees C for 45 to 50 years. RESULTS: Among control subjects, birth hypoxia was associated with a significant (10%) increase in BDNF in cord samples, while among cases, hypoxia was associated with a significant (20%) decrease in BDNF. This differential response to fetal hypoxia was specific to schizophrenia and was not explained by other obstetric complications or by the BDNF valine (val) to methionine (met) polymorphism at codon 66 (val66met). CONCLUSIONS: These findings provide serologically based prospective evidence of disrupted neurotrophic signaling in response to birth hypoxia in the molecular pathogenesis of schizophrenia.
Notes:
H - M Vasiliadis, S E Gilman, S L Buka (2008)  Fetal growth restriction and the development of major depression.   Acta Psychiatr Scand 117: 4. 306-312 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To test the association between fetal growth restriction and the lifetime risk of major depression and the number of recurrent episodes. METHOD: Study subjects (n = 1101) were offspring of participants in the Providence, RI, site of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project. Cox regression was used to investigate the relation between measures of birth size and the lifetime risk of depression and the mean number of depressive episodes was compared across categories of birth size. RESULTS: There was no association between low birth weight, gestational age, ponderal index and small for gestational age and the lifetime risk of major depression, or the number of recurrent episodes. CONCLUSION: Fetal growth restriction, as reflected by multiple measures of birth size, is not associated with the risk of a major depression or the subsequent recurrence of depressive episodes. Results of this study do not support a 'fetal programming' effect in depression.
Notes:
A L Graham, G D Papandonatos, J D DePue, B M Pinto, B Borrelli, C J Neighbors, R Niaura, S L Buka, D B Abrams (2008)  Lifetime characteristics of participants and non-participants in a smoking cessation trial: implications for external validity and public health impact.   Ann Behav Med 35: 3. 295-307 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Detailed information about the characteristics of smokers who do and do not participate in smoking cessation treatment is needed to improve efforts to reach, motivate, and treat smokers. PURPOSE: The aim of this study is to explore a broad range of characteristics related to participation in a smoking cessation trial. METHODS: Eligible smokers were recruited from a longitudinal birth cohort. Participants and non-participants were compared on a broad range of sociodemographics, smoking, psychiatric and substance abuse disorders, personality, and prospective measures from early childhood. Eligible smokers were compared to a matched regional subsample of the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). RESULTS: Few differences were observed, most of which were statistically significant but not clinically meaningful. Compared to non-participants, participants were more likely to be single, have lower income, be more nicotine-dependent, be more motivated to quit, and have higher levels of depressed mood and stress even after covariance of gender, income, and marital status. Sociodemographic differences between participants and the BRFSS sample reflect the skew toward lower socioeconomic status in the original birth cohort. CONCLUSIONS: The encouraging conclusion is that smokers who enroll in cessation trials may not differ much from non-participants. Information about treatment participants can inform the development of recruitment strategies, improve the tailoring of treatment to individual smoker profiles, help to estimate potential selection bias, and improve estimates of population impact.
Notes:
2007
Laura R Stroud, Catherine Solomon, Edmond Shenassa, George Papandonatos, Raymond Niaura, Lewis P Lipsitt, Kaja Lewinn, Stephen L Buka (2007)  Long-term stability of maternal prenatal steroid hormones from the National Collaborative Perinatal Project: still valid after all these years.   Psychoneuroendocrinology 32: 2. 140-150 Feb  
Abstract: Large epidemiological samples, including the National Collaborative Perinatal Project (NCPP), in which blood/serum was collected during pregnancy and offspring followed longitudinally, offer the unique opportunity to examine neuroendocrine mechanisms underlying prenatal "programming" of adult health and disease. However, in order to conduct longitudinal analyses, it is critical to determine the validity of maternal prenatal samples stored over long periods. We investigated the validity of cortisol, testosterone, and their binding globulins (corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG)) in maternal prenatal serum from the NCPP after over 40 years of storage. Study 1 included 64 maternal serum samples collected on the day of delivery; study 2 involved 1099 third trimester serum samples collected between gestational weeks 31 and 36. Across both studies, cortisol and testosterone concentrations were consistent with values from published studies of fresh samples collected at similar points in gestation. CBG and SHBG were present, but showed some differences from published studies. Results support the validity of cortisol and testosterone values following 40+ years of storage. Results also provide validation for future longitudinal tests of prenatal "programming" hypotheses within the NCPP. Stability of steroid hormones over decades suggests that stored samples from other longitudinal studies may also allow opportunities to investigate links between prenatal steroids and long-term offspring outcomes.
Notes:
Laurie T Martin, Laura D Kubzansky, Kaja Z LeWinn, Lewis P Lipsitt, Paul Satz, Stephen L Buka (2007)  Childhood cognitive performance and risk of generalized anxiety disorder.   Int J Epidemiol 36: 4. 769-775 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Perception of control over one's environment, particularly when faced with an ambiguous situation, has been identified as a critical cognitive process involved in worry and generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). Similarly, it is thought that individuals with lower cognitive skills feel less in control, and do not cope as well as individuals with higher cognitive skills. This study tests the hypothesis that individuals with higher cognitive skills are less likely to develop a lifetime diagnosis of GAD, and considers onset in three developmental periods: childhood, adolescence and adulthood. METHODS: Survival analysis and multivariate regression models were used to evaluate the relationship between cognitive performance at age seven, and DSM-IV diagnosis of GAD. Study participants were 689 individuals in their mid-30s, who had been followed since birth as part of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project in Providence, RI, USA. RESULTS: A 15-point (1 SD) advantage in childhood cognitive performance was significantly associated with a 50% reduced risk of lifetime GAD and an 89 and 57% reduction in risk of GAD in childhood and adolescence, respectively, after adjusting for relevant covariates including socio-economic status and parent history of mental health problems. These results were not affected by behavioural inhibition or learning disabilities in childhood. CONCLUSIONS: Childhood cognitive performance is associated with a diagnosis of GAD in childhood and adolescence. Further research on the association between childhood cognitive performance and GAD is warranted.
Notes:
2006
Jennifer W Yu, Stephen L Buka, Marie C McCormick, Garrett M Fitzmaurice, Alka Indurkhya (2006)  Behavioral problems and the effects of early intervention on eight-year-old children with learning disabilities.   Matern Child Health J 10: 4. 329-338 Jul  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: 1) To investigate the comorbidity of verbal and nonverbal learning disability subtypes with several domains of behavior problems among 8-year-old children. 2) To determine whether receipt of an early intervention modified the association between childhood behavior problems and learning disabilities (LD). METHODS: This is a secondary data analysis of the Infant Health and Development Program (IHDP), a randomized clinical trial of an early intervention provided between ages 0 and 3 involving 985 children born low birthweight and premature. The findings are based on a prospective follow-up of these children at 8 years of age. RESULTS: Compared to children without verbal LD (VLD), those with VLD were twice as likely to exhibit clinical levels of total behavior problems and 89% more likely to exhibit externalizing behavior problems. Analysis of specific subscales of behavior revealed significant associations with anxious/depressed and withdrawn behaviors, as well as an increased likelihood of attention problems among children with VLD. No significant association was found between nonverbal LD (NVLD) and any type of behavior problem. Furthermore, there was a significant interaction between VLD and the intervention, in which the odds of internalizing behavior problems were greater among children with VLD. No interaction effect of the intervention occurred for any type of behavior problem among children with NVLD. CONCLUSIONS: These findings provide evidence that distinct differences exist for different learning disability subtypes with regards to behavioral outcomes and the effects of early intervention services among 8-year-old children.
Notes:
Larry J Seidman, Stephen L Buka, Jill M Goldstein, Ming T Tsuang (2006)  Intellectual decline in schizophrenia: evidence from a prospective birth cohort 28 year follow-up study.   J Clin Exp Neuropsychol 28: 2. 225-242 Feb  
Abstract: It is well established that IQ is lower among persons with schizophrenia than in the general population. However, it remains unclear if there is deterioration beyond a premorbid deficit. In order to assess the question of IQ deterioration, we assessed persons pre- and-post psychosis, comparing those who developed schizophrenia with those who did not. Twenty six patients with schizophrenia and 59 normal controls, evaluated at age 7 in the prospective, longitudinal, National Collaborative Perinatal Project (NCPP), were re-tested approximately 28 years later. We assessed change in an estimate of IQ based on the Vocabulary and Block Design tests from the Wechsler intelligence scales. Persons who later developed schizophrenia were significantly impaired on IQ compared to controls at age 7, especially on measures of attention. At age 35, persons with schizophrenia demonstrated significant impairment and deterioration on both IQ sub-tests compared to controls. Because impairment occurs by early childhood and subsequent deterioration occurs at an unknown period, designs with more frequent assessment of IQ through the premorbid, prodromal and early phases of illness are required to identify the key period of decline. Future research on this sample will evaluate the prospective roles of family history and perinatal complications on cognition, and assess the specificity of these findings.
Notes:
David H Rehkopf, Stephen L Buka (2006)  The association between suicide and the socio-economic characteristics of geographical areas: a systematic review.   Psychol Med 36: 2. 145-157 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Despite an extensive literature, there have been widely divergent findings regarding the direction of the association between area socio-economic characteristics and area suicide rates, with high-quality studies finding either a direct relation (higher rates of suicide in higher socio-economic areas), an inverse relation (lower rates of suicide in higher socio-economic areas) or no association. METHOD: We performed a systematic review of the literature dating from 1897 to 2004 and identified 86 publications with 221 separate analyses that met our inclusion criteria. We examined the percent of direct, inverse and null findings stratified by key study characteristics including size of aggregated area, socio-economic measure used, region of study, control variables and study design. RESULTS: Analyses at the community level are significantly more likely to demonstrate lower rates of suicide among higher socio-economic areas than studies using larger areas of aggregation. Measures of area poverty and deprivation are most likely to be inversely associated with suicide rates and median income is least likely to be inversely associated with suicide rates. Analyses using measures of unemployment and education and occupation were equally likely to demonstrate inverse associations. Study results did not vary significantly by gender or by study design. CONCLUSIONS: The heterogeneity of associations is mostly accounted for by study design features that have largely been neglected in this literature. Enhanced attention to size of region and measurement strategies provide a clearer picture of how suicide rates vary by region. Resources for suicide prevention should be targeted to high poverty/deprivation and high unemployment areas.
Notes:
Edmond D Shenassa, Constantine Daskalakis, Stephen L Buka (2006)  Utility of indices of gun availability in the community.   J Epidemiol Community Health 60: 1. 44-49 Jan  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To estimate the degree to which the proportion of homicides and suicides committed with a gun is associated with reported availability of firearms across Chicago neighbourhoods. METHODS: Data were collected as part of the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods (PHDCN), a combined neighbourhood and individual level study of the city of Chicago. The study used data from 837 PHDCN participants between the ages of 17 and 22, residing in 170 different neighbourhoods. Gun availability was measured via participant reports on whether they had carried a gun and whether they perceived gun access to be easy in their community. Data on suicides and homicides were obtained from the Chicago Department of Health. RESULTS: A 10% change in the proportion of homicides committed by a gun in a neighbourhood was associated with a 20% increase in both the odds of reported gun access and reported gun carrying (p=0.002 and 0.048, respectively). The proportion of firearm related suicides was not associated with either of those self reported measures. CONCLUSIONS: The proportion of firearm related homicides, but not the proportion of firearm related suicides, is a useful predictor of gun availability across small areas such as neighbourhoods.
Notes:
John J McGrath, Sukanta Saha, Daniel E Lieberman, Stephen Buka (2006)  Season of birth is associated with anthropometric and neurocognitive outcomes during infancy and childhood in a general population birth cohort.   Schizophr Res 81: 1. 91-100 Jan  
Abstract: The 'season of birth' effect is one of the most consistently replicated associations in schizophrenia epidemiology. In contrast, the association between season of birth and development in the general population is relatively poorly understood. The aim of this study was to explore the impact of season of birth on various anthropometric and neurocognitive variables from birth to age seven in a large, community-based birth cohort. A sample of white singleton infants born after 37 weeks gestation (n = 22,123) was drawn from the US Collaborative Perinatal Project. Anthropometric variables (weight, head circumference, length/height) and various measures of neurocognitive development, were assessed at birth, 8 months, 4 and 7 years of age. Compared to summer/autumn born infants, winter/spring born infants were significantly longer at birth, and at age seven were significantly heavier, taller and had larger head circumference. Winter/spring born infants were achieving significantly higher scores on the Bayley Motor Score at 8 months, the Graham-Ernhart Block Test at age 4, the Wechsler Intelligence Performance and Full Scale scores at age 7, but had significantly lower scores on the Bender-Gestalt Test at age 7 years. Winter/spring birth, while associated with an increased risk of schizophrenia, is generally associated with superior outcomes with respect to physical and cognitive development.
Notes:
Scott P Novak, Sean F Reardon, Stephen W Raudenbush, Stephen L Buka (2006)  Retail tobacco outlet density and youth cigarette smoking: a propensity-modeling approach.   Am J Public Health 96: 4. 670-676 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: We examined whether retail tobacco outlet density was related to youth cigarette smoking after control for a diverse range of neighborhood characteristics. METHODS: Data were gathered from 2116 respondents (aged 11 to 23 years) residing in 178 census tracts in Chicago, Ill. Propensity score stratification methods for continuous exposures were used to adjust for potentially confounding neighborhood characteristics, thus strengthening causal inferences. RESULTS: Retail tobacco outlets were disproportionately located in neighborhoods characterized by social and economic disadvantage. In a model that excluded neighborhood confounders, a marginally significant effect was found. Youths in areas at the highest 75th percentile in retail tobacco outlet density were 13% more likely (odds ratio [OR]=1.13; 95% confidence interval [CI]=0.99, 1.28) to have smoked in the past month compared with those living at the lowest 25th percentile. However, the relation became stronger and significant (OR=0.21; 95% CI=1.04, 1.41) after introduction of tract-level confounders and was statistically significant in the propensity score-adjusted model (OR = 1.20; 95% CI = 1.001, 1.44). Results did not differ significantly between minors and those legally permitted to smoke. CONCLUSIONS: Reductions in retail tobacco outlet density may reduce rates of youth smoking.
Notes:
Jennifer W Yu, Stephen L Buka, Garrett M Fitzmaurice, Marie C McCormick (2006)  Treatment outcomes for substance abuse among adolescents with learning disorders.   J Behav Health Serv Res 33: 3. 275-286 Jul  
Abstract: This paper assesses whether chemically dependent adolescents with comorbid learning disorders (LDs) derived less effective treatment results when compared to chemically dependent adolescents without LD and examines the moderating effects of prior treatments, treatment length, and treatment completion. Two hundred one adolescents were recruited between 1992 and 1993 from Massachusetts residential treatment centers and subsequently followed up 6 months after enrollment. Compared to chemically dependent teenagers without LD, those with LD were twice as likely to re-use substances at least once by follow-up. LD teenagers were more likely to attend Alcoholics/Narcotics Anonymous if they had prior admissions to treatment programs and longer treatment length. LD teenagers who completed treatment also experienced a greater decrease in current depression compared to LD teenagers not completing the treatment. This study is the first to consider outcomes of substance abuse treatment for adolescents with LD and contributes to the growing literature on comorbidity and substance abuse treatment.
Notes:
Jocelyn A Lehrer, Lydia A Shrier, Steven Gortmaker, Stephen Buka (2006)  Depressive symptoms as a longitudinal predictor of sexual risk behaviors among US middle and high school students.   Pediatrics 118: 1. 189-200 Jul  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine whether depressive symptoms are predictive of subsequent sexual risk behavior in a national probability sample of US middle and high school students. METHODS: Sexually active, unmarried, middle and high school students (n = 4152) participated in home interviews in waves I and II of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, at an approximately 1-year interval. Associations between baseline depressive symptoms and sexual risk behaviors over the course of the following year were examined separately for boys and girls, adjusting for demographic variables, religiosity, same-sex attraction/behavior, sexual intercourse before age 10, and baseline sexual risk behavior. RESULTS: In adjusted models, boys and girls with high depressive symptom levels at baseline were significantly more likely than those with low symptom levels to report > or = 1 of the examined sexual risk behaviors over the course of the 1-year follow-up period. For boys, high depressive symptom levels were specifically predictive of condom nonuse at last sex, birth control nonuse at last sex, and substance use at last sex; these results were similar to those of parallel analyses with a continuous depression measure. For girls, moderate depressive symptoms were associated with substance use at last sex, and no significant associations were found between high depressive symptom levels and individual sexual risk behaviors. Parallel analyses with the continuous depression measure found significant associations for condom nonuse at last sex, birth control nonuse at last sex, > or = 3 sexual partners, and any sexual risk behavior. CONCLUSION: In this study, depressive symptoms predicted sexual risk behavior in a national sample of male and female middle and high school students over a 1-year period.
Notes:
Michael C Monuteaux, Deborah Blacker, Joseph Biederman, Garrett Fitzmaurice, Stephen L Buka (2006)  Maternal smoking during pregnancy and offspring overt and covert conduct problems: a longitudinal study.   J Child Psychol Psychiatry 47: 9. 883-890 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Empirical evidence demonstrates that conduct disorder (CD) symptoms tend to cluster into covert and overt domains. We hypothesized that overt and covert CD symptoms may be distinct constructs with distinct risk factors. An important risk factor for CD is maternal smoking during pregnancy. We further investigated this association, attending to overt and covert CD symptom subtypes. Also, we tested whether gender and socioeconomic status (SES) modified this association. METHOD: Participants were male and female adult offspring (n = 682) of a community sample of pregnant women followed longitudinally from prenatal life to age 22. Prospective assessments of maternal smoking during pregnancy were used to predict self-reported DSM-III CD symptoms. RESULTS: Prenatal exposure to smoking was significantly associated with increased overt CD symptoms for participants of low SES, but not for participants of high SES, whereas covert CD symptoms were not associated with prenatal exposure. Gender did not significantly modify the relationship between maternal smoking and CD symptom subtypes. CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest that the previously documented association between maternal smoking and CD may be specific to overt CD symptoms, providing support for the heuristic value of differentiating overt and covert CD symptoms as distinct syndromes. These findings further support smoking prevention programs for pregnant women.
Notes:
Marie C McCormick, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Stephen L Buka, Julie Goldman, Jennifer Yu, Mikhail Salganik, David T Scott, Forrest C Bennett, Libby L Kay, Judy C Bernbaum, Charles R Bauer, Camilia Martin, Elizabeth R Woods, Anne Martin, Patrick H Casey (2006)  Early intervention in low birth weight premature infants: results at 18 years of age for the Infant Health and Development Program.   Pediatrics 117: 3. 771-780 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To assess whether improvements in cognitive and behavioral development seen in preschool educational programs persist, we compared those in a multisite randomized trial of such a program over the first 3 years of life (INT) to those with follow-up only (FUO) at 18 months of age. METHODS: This was a prospective follow-up of the Infant Health and Development Program at 8 sites heterogeneous for sociodemographic characteristics. Originally 985 children were randomized to the INT (n = 377) or FUO (n = 608) groups within 2 birth weight strata: heavier low birth weight (HLBW; 2001-2499 g) and lighter low birth weight (LLBW; < or = 2000 g). Primary outcome measures were the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT-III), reading and mathematics subscales of the Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement, youth self-report on the Total Behavior Problem Index, and high-risk behaviors on the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBSS). Secondary outcomes included Weschler full-scale IQ, caregiver report on the Total Behavior Problem Index, and caregiver and youth self-reported physical health using the Medical Outcome Study measure. Assessors were masked as to study status. RESULTS: We assessed 636 youths at 18 years (64.6% of the 985, 72% of whom had not died or refused at prior assessments). After adjusting for cohort attrition, differences favoring the INT group were seen on the Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement in math (5.1 points), YRBSS (-0.7 points), and the PPVT-III (3.8 points) in the HLBW youth. In the LLBW youth, the Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement in reading was higher in the FUO than INT group (4.2). CONCLUSIONS: The findings in the HLBW INT group provide support for preschool education to make long-term changes in a diverse group of children who are at developmental risk. The lack of observable benefit in the LLBW group raises questions about the biological and educational factors that foster or inhibit sustained effects of early educational intervention.
Notes:
Judith Colla, Stephan Buka, David Harrington, Jane M Murphy (2006)  Depression and modernization: a cross-cultural study of women.   Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 41: 4. 271-279 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: This study concerns depression among women living in developing and developed parts of the world. Using a continuum of environments conceptualized as ranging from traditional to modern, the goal is to explore the hypothesis that the prevalence of depression will be higher among those living in modern compared to traditional societies. This issue is examined among samples from West Africa and North America. METHODS: The subjects are 657 women who reside in four locations. An operational definition of modernization is used to place the locales as a continuum in the following order: rural Yorubaland in Nigeria, Yorubas living in urban Nigeria, rural Canada, and urban United States. Variables employed include education, religious orientation, and the role of women as mothers and workers. Depression is assessed using an algorithm based on generally acknowledged criteria. Multivariate logistic regression is used to generate point estimates and confidence intervals for prevalence odds ratios, to adjust for potential confounders, and to assess effect modification. RESULTS: The prevalence of depression was lowest among rural Nigerians and highest among urban residents in the United States. The association of depression with the proposed continuum was strongest among women under the age of 45 who had living children (Odds Ratio: 2.1; 95% Confidence Interval: 1.6-2.9). CONCLUSIONS: In the areas studied, a traditional way of life seems to offer protection against some of the stresses associated with modernization although it does not appear to compensate for the adversity of childlessness. Level of modernization may be a useful concept for understanding differences in rates of depression in different parts of the world.
Notes:
Jocelyn A Lehrer, Stephen Buka, Steven Gortmaker, Lydia A Shrier (2006)  Depressive symptomatology as a predictor of exposure to intimate partner violence among US female adolescents and young adults.   Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 160: 3. 270-276 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To examine whether depressive symptomatology is predictive of subsequent intimate partner violence victimization among a national prospective sample of female adolescents and young adults. DESIGN: Home interview data from 2 waves of the school-based National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health were used to examine whether baseline depressive symptomatology was associated with increased risk of past-year exposure to physical abuse by a current partner at 5-year follow-up, controlling for age, race/ethnicity, parental education, retrospective childhood physical and sexual abuse, and baseline dating violence and forced sex. SETTING: A stratified random sample of 80 US high schools and 52 middle schools. PARTICIPANTS: All young women (n = 1659) were in a current opposite-sex relationship at follow-up. MAIN EXPOSURE: Baseline past-week depressive symptomatology, measured as both a dichotomous and continuous variable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Past-year exposure to mild and moderate to severe physical abuse by a current intimate partner. RESULTS: In adjusted models with dichotomous depressive symptoms, high baseline symptom levels were associated with 1.86 times the odds of subsequent exposure to moderate to severe partner violence (95% confidence interval, 1.05-3.29). In adjusted models with continuous depressive symptoms, an increase of 1 SD in baseline symptom levels was associated with a 24% increase in odds of exposure to mild partner violence and a 24% increase in the odds of exposure to moderate to severe partner violence. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study suggest that depressive symptomatology among girls during adolescence is associated with increased risk of subsequent exposure to physical partner violence. Prevention, identification, and treatment of depressive symptomatology among adolescent girls may help to reduce the likelihood of subsequent victimization.
Notes:
2005
Beth E Molnar, Andrea L Roberts, Angela Browne, Hannah Gardener, Stephen L Buka (2005)  What girls need: recommendations for preventing violence among urban girls in the US.   Soc Sci Med 60: 10. 2191-2204 May  
Abstract: The last decade saw increases in arrests of girls for violent behavior and a corresponding concern that girls' involvement in violence was increasing in the USA. However, there are few empirical studies of the dynamics of violence by girls, leaving providers of violence prevention programs and policy-makers without evidence on which to base gender-appropriate prevention strategies. To address this gap, qualitative interviews were conducted with a diverse sample of 61 urban girls aged 11-17. Findings were compared with quantitative interviews from the prospective cohort of 961 girls from whom these respondents were drawn, from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods. Mixed-method techniques were employed. Qualitative data were analyzed for girls' recommendations for preventing involvement in violence. Data from the larger cohort were used to test these recommendations quantitatively. Due to study design, in the qualitative sample, 36 girls (64%) were involved in recent violence, most often with or against other girls. Pro-social behavior was common among both violent and nonviolent girls. In the overall cohort sample, 24.9% of girls reported violent perpetration and 97% reported pro-social activities. Eight themes regarding staying safe and preventing violence emerged from the qualitative interviews: girls stayed safe by staying home, avoiding dangerous people, staying busy with after-school activities, remaining calm when confronted, using escorts, and fighting back if attacked. Girls' protective influences included: empathic parental involvement, positive relationships with peers and older youth, and involvement in safe and constructive activities. These findings emphasize that safety in community, school, and family settings is critical for girls in avoiding violence and other risky behaviors. Violence prevention programs should focus on enhancing girls' relationships with mothers, older girls, and friends their age.
Notes:
Marjan Drukker, Stephen L Buka, Charles Kaplan, Kwame McKenzie, Jim Van Os (2005)  Social capital and young adolescents' perceived health in different sociocultural settings.   Soc Sci Med 61: 1. 185-198 Jul  
Abstract: We conducted a cross-national study to examine the association between neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation, social capital and child health in two countries and multiple ethnic groups. For our analysis we used data from (1) the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods (PHDCN), USA and (2) the Maastricht Quality of Life study (MQoL), the Netherlands. Both the PHDCN and the MQoL collected data on objective neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation, subjective neighbourhood social capital (i.e. informal social control, ISC, social cohesion and trust, SC&T), and children's perceived health. For the present analyses, 11- and 12-year olds were selected. Multilevel analyses were conducted using both neighbourhood level and individual-level data. Lower socioeconomic deprivation scores and higher levels of ISC as well as SC&T were associated with higher levels of children's perceived health, in both Maastricht and the Chicago Hispanic subsample, but not in the Chicago non-Hispanic samples. The results suggest that associations between the wider social environment and health outcomes vary across different populations and cross-national contexts.
Notes:
Heidi W Thermenos, Jill M Goldstein, Stephen L Buka, Russell A Poldrack, Jennifer K Koch, Ming T Tsuang, Larry J Seidman (2005)  The effect of working memory performance on functional MRI in schizophrenia.   Schizophr Res 74: 2-3. 179-194 May  
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Studies of prefrontal cortical (PFC) function in schizophrenia have been inconsistent, with studies showing both increased and decreased PFC activation compared to healthy controls. Discrepant findings may be due to task performance effects or demographic differences between samples. We report functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data comparing subjects with schizophrenia and healthy controls performing a 2-back working memory (WM) task, addressing the effects of task performance. METHODS: Twenty-two controls and 14 patients with DSM-IV schizophrenia, scanned on a Siemens 1.5 T scanner, performed a visual letter 2-back task and control task (CPT-X) during fMRI. Data were analyzed using Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM)-99. RESULTS: After statistical adjustment for performance differences, persons with schizophrenia showed significantly greater activation than controls in the right medial frontal gyrus and left inferior parietal lobule/medial temporal gyrus region (BA 39/40), and a trend toward greater activation in the left ventrolateral PFC. This pattern was also observed in demographically matched subgroups of participants. CONCLUSIONS: Data are consistent with findings reported in recent studies showing increased PFC and parietal activation in schizophrenia when the effects of reduced WM task performance in patients with schizophrenia are addressed. Further studies are needed to clarify the pathophysiological basis of WM load sensitivity in schizophrenia and its relationship to genes.
Notes:
Beth E Molnar, Angela Browne, Magdalena Cerda, Stephen L Buka (2005)  Violent behavior by girls reporting violent victimization: a prospective study.   Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 159: 8. 731-739 Aug  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To assess the relationships between individual victimization and neighborhood-level violence on subsequent violent perpetration by adolescent girls in a community-based sample. DESIGN: Longitudinal, multilevel analysis of data collected by the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods. Three in-home interviews were conducted approximately 24 months apart between November 1995 and January 2002 with youth and their caregivers. Community-level data also were collected in 1995 from a random sample of Chicago residents. Hierarchical regression models and propensity scores were used. SETTING: Families and neighborhoods in Chicago. PARTICIPANTS: Population-based sample of 637 girls, ages 9 to 15 years at baseline, and the neighborhoods in which they resided. This sample is diverse in race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status, family structure, and neighborhood characteristics. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Self-reports of violent behavior in the 12 months before the third interview. RESULTS: At baseline, 38% of the girls reported perpetrating at least 1 violent behavior in the prior 12 months, 28% reported past year violent behavior at the first follow-up interview, and 14% reported past year violent behavior at the third interview. The odds of violent behavior were 2.2 times higher among girls who reported prior violent victimization, after prior confounding factors and baseline violent behavior were controlled (95% confidence interval, 1.3- 4.4). Homicides and concentrated poverty in girls' neighborhoods also were associated with aggression by girls. CONCLUSIONS: Improving safety in communities and homes may reduce rates of violent perpetration by adolescent girls. Study results suggest that, to facilitate identification of and healing among adolescent survivors of violence, practitioners should recognize perpetration of violence as potential sequelae of prior violent victimization.
Notes:
S Bryn Austin, Steven J Melly, Brisa N Sanchez, Aarti Patel, Stephen Buka, Steven L Gortmaker (2005)  Clustering of fast-food restaurants around schools: a novel application of spatial statistics to the study of food environments.   Am J Public Health 95: 9. 1575-1581 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: We examined the concentration of fast food restaurants in areas proximal to schools to characterize school neighborhood food environments. METHODS: We used geocoded databases of restaurant and school addresses to examine locational patterns of fast-food restaurants and kindergartens and primary and secondary schools in Chicago. We used the bivariate K function statistical method to quantify the degree of clustering (spatial dependence) of fast-food restaurants around school locations. RESULTS: The median distance from any school in Chicago to the nearest fast-food restaurant was 0.52 km, a distance that an adult can walk in little more than 5 minutes, and 78% of schools had at least 1 fast-food restaurant within 800 m. Fast-food restaurants were statistically significantly clustered in areas within a short walking distance from schools, with an estimated 3 to 4 times as many fast-food restaurants within 1.5 km from schools than would be expected if the restaurants were distributed throughout the city in a way unrelated to school locations. CONCLUSIONS: Fast-food restaurants are concentrated within a short walking distance from schools, exposing children to poor-quality food environments in their school neighborhoods.
Notes:
2004
Beth E Molnar, Steven L Gortmaker, Fiona C Bull, Stephen L Buka (2004)  Unsafe to play? Neighborhood disorder and lack of safety predict reduced physical activity among urban children and adolescents.   Am J Health Promot 18: 5. 378-386 May/Jun  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Lack of physical activity is associated with increased risk of overweight and cardiovascular disease, conditions associated with lower socioeconomic status (SES). Associations between activity levels of urban youth and limited access to safe recreation areas in their neighborhoods of residence were investigated. DESIGN: Analyses of data from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods, a multilevel longitudinal study of families and communities, are reported. SETTING: Chicago, Illinois. SUBJECTS: Individual-level data were obtained from 1378 youth 11 to 16 years old and caregivers living in 80 neighborhood clusters. Neighborhood-level data were collected from 8782 community residents and videotapes of 15,141 block faces. MEASURES: Parental estimates of hours youth spent in recreational programming were used to estimate physical activity. A scale of residents' assessment of neighborhood safety for children's play was created; disorder measures came from videotaped observations. RESULTS: Physical activity averaged 2.7 hours/week (SD = 5.0), varying significantly across neighborhoods. Using hierarchical linear regression, SES, age, and male gender, but not body mass index, were independently associated with physical activity. Lower neighborhood safety and social disorder were significantly associated with less activity, controlling for demographics. CONCLUSIONS: One mechanism for reduced physical activity among youth may be the influence of unsafe neighborhoods. Neighborhood interventions to increase safety and reduce disorder may be efficacious in increasing physical activity, thereby reducing risk of overweight and cardiovascular disease.
Notes:
Laurie T Martin, Garrett M Fitzmaurice, Daniel J Kindlon, Stephen L Buka (2004)  Cognitive performance in childhood and early adult illness: a prospective cohort study.   J Epidemiol Community Health 58: 8. 674-679 Aug  
Abstract: STUDY OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether cognitive performance in childhood is an early determinant of adult illness. DESIGN: Prospective cohort study covering over 30 years. SETTING: Providence, Rhode Island, USA. PARTICIPANTS: 633 people ages 30-39 followed up since birth as part of the Providence cohort of the national collaborative perinatal project. MAIN RESULTS: Higher cognitive performance at age 7 was related to a significantly reduced risk of serious illness in adulthood, OR = 0.65 (95%CI: 0.47 to 0.89) for a one standard deviation (15 point) increase in IQ score. This association was independent of both parental socioeconomic status and participant's attained level of education. CONCLUSIONS: General cognitive performance may be an important and informative early determinant of adult health. Further evaluation of this association and mechanisms linking cognitive performance and health may provide new and innovative strategies to improve disease management and reduce morbidity.
Notes:
Beth E Molnar, Matthew J Miller, Deborah Azrael, Stephen L Buka (2004)  Neighborhood predictors of concealed firearm carrying among children and adolescents: results from the project on human development in Chicago neighborhoods.   Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 158: 7. 657-664 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous studies of concealed firearm carrying among children and adolescents have focused on individual risk factors. OBJECTIVE: To identify features of neighborhoods associated with concealed firearm carrying among a representative sample of youth from Chicago, Ill. DESIGN: Cross-sectional analysis of individual- and neighborhood-level data collected by the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods. SETTING: Families and neighborhoods in Chicago. PARTICIPANTS: Population-based sample of 1842 multiethnic youth aged 9 to 19 years and the 218 neighborhoods in which they resided.Main Outcome Measure Whether youth had ever carried a concealed firearm. RESULTS: Lifetime estimates for concealed firearm carrying were 4.9% for males and 1.1% for females. We found that youth in safer and less disordered neighborhoods were less likely than youth in unsafe and more disordered neighborhoods to carry concealed firearms. Specifically, multilevel nonlinear regression models identified a positive association between concealed firearm carrying and (1) community members' ratings of neighborhoods as unsafe for children; (2) neighborhood social disorder; and (3) neighborhood physical disorder. Neighborhood collective efficacy was negatively associated with concealed firearm carrying. Models controlled for neighborhood economic indicators and individual and family factors associated with the carrying of concealed firearms by youth. CONCLUSIONS: Youth are less likely to carry concealed firearms in areas where there is less violence and increased safety. Interventions to improve neighborhood conditions such as increasing safety, improving collective efficacy, and reducing social and physical disorder may be efficacious in preventing firearm use and its associated injuries and death among youth.
Notes:
Stephen L Buka, Jill M Goldstein, Eleni Spartos, Ming T Tsuang (2004)  The retrospective measurement of prenatal and perinatal events: accuracy of maternal recall.   Schizophr Res 71: 2-3. 417-426 Dec  
Abstract: Adverse obstetric events have been implicated as risk factors for schizophrenia. Many studies have relied on retrospective recall of these events, given typical adult onset of schizophrenia, when most studies ascertain their samples. The goal of this study was to assess the validity of an interview for the long-term recall of prenatal and perinatal events. Ninety-six women from the Providence and Boston cohorts of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project were administered a brief structured telephone interview regarding their recall of pregnancy-related events that had occurred 22 years or more prior to interview. Women accurately reported major medical events such as cesarean section, breech delivery, and multiple birth (kappa=1) and demographic items, such as age at birth and parity. Medical interventions and major medical conditions such as placental (kappa=-0.01) and cord (kappa=-0.10) difficulties were not accurately reported. Estimated birthweight, low birthweight, and length of gestation were recalled with reasonable accuracy. Women who completed high school generally recalled events more accurately than those who did not. It is therefore important to attend to the sources of information, the mode of interviewing, the specific type of event, and sociodemographic characteristics of the informant to improve the accuracy of retrospective data on obstetric events, and to increase the validity of findings relating these to the onset of schizophrenia.
Notes:
M C Monuteaux, G Fitzmaurice, D Blacker, S L Buka, J Biederman (2004)  Specificity in the familial aggregation of overt and covert conduct disorder symptoms in a referred attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder sample.   Psychol Med 34: 6. 1113-1127 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: To examine the familial associations of overt and covert antisocial behavior within the diagnosis of conduct disorder (CD) in families ascertained by referred children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and to test if these familial associations differed between male and female probands. METHOD: Subjects were clinically-referred male and female ADHD children (n = 273) and their first-degree biological relatives (n = 807). Scores for overt and covert conduct problems were calculated by summing the DSM-III-R conduct disorder symptoms, as derived from structured diagnostic interviews. Familial aggregation analyses were conducted with multivariate regression modeling methodology. RESULTS: Proband overt scores significantly predicted the overt scores of their relatives, and proband covert scores significantly predicted the covert scores of their relatives. There was no evidence of covert symptom scores predicting overt scores or vice versa. There was some evidence that the aggregation of covert symptoms was stronger in the families of female probands. CONCLUSIONS: These results provide preliminary evidence that overt and covert conduct disorder symptoms are independently transmitted through families and may represent distinct familial syndromes.
Notes:
Laura D Kubzansky, Laurie T Martin, Stephen L Buka (2004)  Early manifestations of personality and adult emotional functioning.   Emotion 4: 4. 364-377 Dec  
Abstract: Developmental antecedents to adult emotional functioning were investigated in an epidemiologic study using theories of personality and emotion. The authors tested whether different types of adult emotional distress can be linked to childhood personality attributes. Using data from 3,138 children at age 7, measures of 4 childhood personality attributes were developed and validated: Behavioral Inhibition, Distress Proneness, Attention, and Inappropriate Interpersonal Self-Regulation. Sound psychometric properties of these scales are demonstrated by considering the measures across multiple samples and in comparison with established child behavior measures. Emotional distress measures were obtained for 694 of these individuals at age 35. Of the personality attributes, 3 of 4 (except behavioral inhibition) predicted general levels of distress as well as specific aspects of adult emotional functioning.
Notes:
2003
Janet W Rich-Edwards, Stephen L Buka, Robert T Brennan, Felton Earls (2003)  Diverging associations of maternal age with low birthweight for black and white mothers.   Int J Epidemiol 32: 1. 83-90 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: In the US, the risk of low birthweight appears to increase more quickly with maternal age for black women than it does for white women. Our aim was to investigate correlates and causes of the racial/ethnic divergence in low birthweight by maternal age. METHODS: We analysed birth certificate data from 96 887 singleton births to black and white mothers in Chicago from 1994 to 1996 to determine if the association between maternal age and low birthweight differed by maternal ethnicity, marital status, and socioeconomic disadvantage. The association of maternal age with risk of low birthweight was examined, considering especially the interactions of maternal age with maternal race/ethnicity, marital status, education, and neighbourhood poverty. RESULTS: In unadjusted data, the risk of low birthweight rose steeply with maternal age for black, but not white, mothers. Adjustment for the main effects of maternal education, marital status, adequacy of prenatal care, cigarette smoking, and neighbourhood poverty accounted for some of the age-related excess risk of black mothers. Further adjustment for interactions of maternal age with these risk factors eliminated the ethnic divergence in age slopes. The fully adjusted analysis indicated that the risk of low birthweight rises more quickly with maternal age for disadvantaged women, regardless of race/ethnicity. CONCLUSION: This analysis suggests that hardships act cumulatively to threaten reproductive health. The particularly steep increase in risk of low birthweight with increasing maternal age for black women is explained by the high prevalence of disadvantage in this population.
Notes:
Kimberly A Lochner, Ichiro Kawachi, Robert T Brennan, Stephen L Buka (2003)  Social capital and neighborhood mortality rates in Chicago.   Soc Sci Med 56: 8. 1797-1805 Apr  
Abstract: Several empirical studies have suggested that neighborhood characteristics influence health, with most studies having focused on neighborhood deprivation or aspects of the physical environment, such as services and amenities. However, such physical characteristics are not the only features of neighborhoods that potentially affect health. Neighborhoods also matter because of the nature of their social organization. This study examined social capital as a potential neighborhood characteristic influencing health. Using a cross-sectional study design which linked counts of death for persons 45-64 years by race and sex to neighborhood indicators of social capital and poverty for 342 Chicago neighborhoods in the USA, we tested the ecological association between neighborhood-level social capital and mortality rates, taking advantage of the community survey data collected as part of the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods. We estimated a hierarchical generalized linear model to examine the association of race and sex specific mortality rates to social capital. Overall, neighborhood social capital-as measured by reciprocity, trust, and civic participation-was associated with lower neighborhood death rates, after adjustment for neighborhood material deprivation. Specifically, higher levels of neighborhood social capital were associated with lower neighborhood death rates for total mortality as well as death from heart disease and "other" causes for White men and women and, to a less consistent extent, for Blacks. However, there was no association between social capital and cancer mortality. Although, the findings from this study extend the state-level findings linking social capital to health to the level of neighborhoods, much work remains to be carried out before social capital can be widely applied to improve population health, including establishing standards of measurement, and exploring the potential "downsides" of social capital.
Notes:
Stephen L Buka, Robert T Brennan, Janet W Rich-Edwards, Stephen W Raudenbush, Felton Earls (2003)  Neighborhood support and the birth weight of urban infants.   Am J Epidemiol 157: 1. 1-8 Jan  
Abstract: Differences in maternal characteristics only partially explain the lower birth weights of infants of African-American women. It is hypothesized that economic and social features of urban neighborhoods may further account for these differences. The authors conducted a household survey of 8,782 adults residing in 343 Chicago, Illinois, neighborhoods to assess mean levels of perceived social support and used US Census data to estimate neighborhood economic disadvantage. Data on birth weight and maternal risk factors were gathered from 95,711 birth certificates (1994-1996). Before statistical adjustment of the data, infants born to African-American mothers were found to be, on average, 297 g lighter than those born to White mothers. After adjustment for individual-level risk factors, this difference was reduced to 154 g. For African-American mothers only, mean birth weight decreased significantly as the neighborhood level of economic disadvantage increased. For White mothers only, a significant positive association was found between perceived levels of neighborhood social support and infant birth weight. Adding these neighborhood-level predictors to the model reduced the adjusted White versus African-American difference in birth weight to 124 g. Results support the hypothesis that neighborhood-level factors are significantly associated with infant birth weight.
Notes:
Stephen E Gilman, Ichiro Kawachi, Garrett M Fitzmaurice, Stephen L Buka (2003)  Family disruption in childhood and risk of adult depression.   Am J Psychiatry 160: 5. 939-946 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The authors examined the risk that family disruption and low socioeconomic status in early childhood confer on the onset of major depression in adulthood. METHOD: Participants were 1,104 offspring of mothers enrolled during pregnancy in the Providence, R.I., site of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project. Measures of childhood family disruption and socioeconomic status were obtained before birth and at age 7. Structured diagnostic interviews were used to assess respondents' lifetime history of major depressive episode between the ages of 18 and 39. Survival analysis was used to identify childhood risks for depression onset. RESULTS: Parental divorce in early childhood was associated with a higher lifetime risk of depression among subjects whose mothers did not remarry as well as among subjects whose mothers remarried. These effects were more pronounced when accompanied by high levels of parental conflict. Independent of the respondents' adult socioeconomic status, low socioeconomic status in childhood predicted an elevated risk of depression. CONCLUSIONS: Family disruption and low socioeconomic status in early childhood increase the long-term risk for major depression. Reducing childhood disadvantages may be one avenue for prevention of depression. Identification of modifiable pathways linking aspects of the early childhood environment to adult mental health is needed to mitigate the long-term consequences of childhood disadvantage.
Notes:
E D Shenassa, S N Catlin, S L Buka (2003)  Lethality of firearms relative to other suicide methods: a population based study.   J Epidemiol Community Health 57: 2. 120-124 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: (1) To quantify lethality of firearms relative to other suicide methods, (2) to quantify the extent to which suicide mortality may be reduced by limiting access to firearms. METHODS: Data on suicides and hospitalised para-suicides that occurred in the state of Illinois from 1990 to 1997 were combined. Total number of episodes for each suicide method was estimated as the sum of the number of suicides and the number of para-suicides for that method. Gender and suicide method were used as proxies for intention to die, and estimated lethality of suicide methods within method-gender groups (for example, male firearm users). Logistic regression was used to quantify the lethality of firearms relative to other suicide methods. Excess mortality associated with the use of firearms was estimated by conservatively assuming that in the absence of firearms the next most lethal suicide method would be used. RESULTS: From January 1990 to December 1997, among individuals 10 years or older in the state of Illinois, there were 37,352 hospital admissions for para-suicide and 10,287 completed suicides. Firearms are the most lethal suicide method. Episodes involving firearms are 2.6 times (95% CI 2.1 to 3.1) more lethal than those involving suffocation-the second most lethal suicide method. Preventing access to firearms can reduce the proportion of fatal firearms related suicides by 32% among minors, and 6.5% among adults. CONCLUSIONS: Limiting access to firearms is a potentially effective means of reducing suicide mortality.
Notes:
Beth E Molnar, Stephen L Buka, Robert T Brennan, John K Holton, Felton Earls (2003)  A multilevel study of neighborhoods and parent-to-child physical aggression: results from the project on human development in Chicago neighborhoods.   Child Maltreat 8: 2. 84-97 May  
Abstract: The majority of children in the United States experience parent-to-child physical aggression (PCPA), a disciplinary strategy out of favor with many experts. Several decades of research have documented a link between community characteristics and severe child maltreatment. None have taken a multilevel approach to study whether neighborhoods affect the amount of corporal punishment and/or physical abuse used by individual families. Data for this article come from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods and were analyzed using hierarchical linear modeling. An interval scale of PCPA was developed. Values obtained show that several neighborhood characteristics were associated with PCPA. Immigrant concentration remained significant after controlling for family composition. A cross-level interaction was found between neighborhood social networks and Hispanic race/ethnicity. The article's conclusion is that neighborhood characteristics may influence the amount of PCPA used by families. Neighborhood intervention strategies hold promise.
Notes:
Stephen L Buka, Edmond D Shenassa, Raymond Niaura (2003)  Elevated risk of tobacco dependence among offspring of mothers who smoked during pregnancy: a 30-year prospective study.   Am J Psychiatry 160: 11. 1978-1984 Nov  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The authors' goal was to investigate whether maternal smoking during pregnancy is associated with an increased risk of nicotine dependence among adult offspring. METHOD: Prospective data from two samples of offspring in the National Collaborative Perinatal Project, a long-term prospective investigation from pregnancy through adulthood, were combined (N=1,248). Maternal smoking during pregnancy was assessed during each prenatal visit. Offspring smoking behavior and lifetime risk of nicotine dependence were obtained by structured interview with the Diagnostic Interview Schedule; the mean age of the offspring at the time of interview was 29 years. RESULTS: Offspring whose mothers reported smoking a pack or more of cigarettes during their pregnancy were significantly more likely to meet DSM criteria for lifetime tobacco dependence than offspring of mothers who reported that they never smoked during pregnancy. The odds of progressing from smoking to nicotine dependence were almost twice as great for offspring whose mothers smoked heavily during pregnancy. These significant differences remained after adjustments for participants' gender and age and maternal socioeconomic status and age at pregnancy. Results were comparable for men and women. The findings were specific for tobacco dependence; odds of marijuana dependence were not significantly elevated among the offspring of tobacco smokers. CONCLUSIONS: Offspring of mothers who smoked a pack or more of cigarettes during pregnancy are at elevated risk of developing nicotine dependence but not marijuana dependence as adults. Maternal smoking during pregnancy is a risk factor for subsequent nicotine dependence among offspring.
Notes:
John McGrath, Darryl Eyles, Bryan Mowry, Robert Yolken, Stephen Buka (2003)  Low maternal vitamin D as a risk factor for schizophrenia: a pilot study using banked sera.   Schizophr Res 63: 1-2. 73-78 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Evidence from epidemiology suggests that low maternal vitamin D may be a risk factor for schizophrenia. METHOD: Based on sera taken during the third trimester, we compared the level of 25 hydroxyvitamin D3 in mothers of individuals with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorders versus mothers of unaffected controls. For each case, we selected two controls matched on race, gender and date of birth of the offspring. RESULTS: There was no significant difference in third trimester maternal vitamin D in the entire sample (cases = 26, controls = 51). Within the subgroup of black individuals (n = 21), there was a trend level difference in the predicted direction. CONCLUSIONS: Maternal vitamin D does not operate as a continuous graded risk factor for schizophrenia, however, the results in the black subgroup raise the possibility that below a certain critical threshold, low levels of maternal vitamin D may be associated with an increased risk of schizophrenia.
Notes:
S E Gilman, D B Abrams, S L Buka (2003)  Socioeconomic status over the life course and stages of cigarette use: initiation, regular use, and cessation.   J Epidemiol Community Health 57: 10. 802-808 Oct  
Abstract: STUDY OBJECTIVE: To investigate the association between multiple indicators of socioeconomic status (SES) over the life course and three stages of cigarette use: initiation, regular use, and cessation. DESIGN: Prospective birth cohort study. SETTING: Providence, Rhode Island. PARTICIPANTS: Subjects (n=657) aged 30 to 39 were offspring of participants in the Brown University cohort of the United States National Collaborative Perinatal Project started in 1959. MAIN RESULTS: A significantly increased risk of smoking initiation was observed among people from lower socioeconomic backgrounds. Low SES in childhood also increased the risk for progression to regular smoking, and was associated with a reduced likelihood of smoking cessation. Progression to regular smoking and smoking persistence were also associated with lower adult SES. CONCLUSIONS: Socioeconomic conditions over the life course accumulate to produce increased rates of smoking uptake and reduced rates of cessation among lower SES people. Addressing SES gradients in smoking will require persistent and extended intervention over multiple life stages.
Notes:
Edmond D Shenassa, Jeanne M McCaffery, Gary E Swan, Taline V Khroyan, Sohaila Shakib, Caryn Lerman, Michael Lyons, Michelle Mouttapa, Raymond S Niaura, Stephen L Buka, Frances Leslie, Susan L Santangelo (2003)  Intergenerational transmission of tobacco use and dependence: a transdisciplinary perspective.   Nicotine Tob Res 5 Suppl 1: S55-S69 Dec  
Abstract: Numerous questions remain regarding the intergenerational transmission of tobacco use and dependence, and some of these questions are best approached from a transdisciplinary perspective. For example, considering both genetic and environmental influences on cigarette smoking promises to be a fruitful venue for future investigations. In this paper, we consider the evidence regarding intergenerational influences on the transmission of tobacco use and nicotine dependence in both humans and animal models; our focus will be on genetic influences, in utero exposure to nicotine, and some postnatal influences. Research gaps that exist between scientific disciplines are highlighted, and some directions for future research are suggested.
Notes:
2002
Stephen E Gilman, Ichiro Kawachi, Garrett M Fitzmaurice, Stephen L Buka (2002)  Socioeconomic status in childhood and the lifetime risk of major depression.   Int J Epidemiol 31: 2. 359-367 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Major depression occurs more frequently among people of lower socioeconomic status (SES) and among females. Although the focus of considerable investigation, the development of SES and sex differences in depression remains to be fully explained. In this study, we test the hypotheses that low childhood SES predicts an increased risk of adult depression and contributes to a higher risk of depression among females. METHODS: Participants were 1132 adult offspring of mothers enrolled in the Providence, Rhode Island site of the US National Collaborative Perinatal Project between 1959 and 1966. Childhood SES, indexed by parental occupation, was assessed at the time of participants' birth and seventh year. A lifetime history and age at onset of major depressive episode were ascertained via structured interviews according to diagnostic criteria. Survival analyses were used to model the likelihood of first depression onset as a function of childhood SES. RESULTS: Participants from lower SES backgrounds had nearly a twofold increase in risk for major depression compared to those from the highest SES background independent of childhood sociodemographic factors, family history of mental illness, and adult SES. Analyses of sex differences in the effect of childhood SES on adult depression provided modest support for the hypothesis that childhood SES contributes to adult sex differences in depression. CONCLUSIONS: Low SES in childhood is related to a higher risk of major depression in adults. Social inequalities in depression likely originate early in life. Further research is needed to identify the pathways linking childhood conditions to SES differences in the incidence of major depression.
Notes:
Noboru Iwata, Stephen Buka (2002)  Race/ethnicity and depressive symptoms: a cross-cultural/ethnic comparison among university students in East Asia, North and South America.   Soc Sci Med 55: 12. 2243-2252 Dec  
Abstract: To examine manifestations of depressive symptomatology among undergraduate students in East Asia, North and South America, responses to the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) were compared across Japanese (n = 310), Anglo-American (n = 377), Native American (n = 353), and Argentinean (n = 110) undergraduate students. Japanese reported a significantly higher level of low positive affect, leading to significantly higher total CES-D scores, whereas their negative symptoms score was comparable to scores of Anglo-Americans and Argentineans. Although Native Americans were more likely to endorse negative symptoms, their low positive affect score was comparable to those of Argentineans. Argentineans appear to suffer less from depressive symptoms. Results from a Differential Item Functioning analysis, using Anglo-Americans as the reference group, indicated that: (1) the manifestation of depressive symptoms seemed to be similar for Anglo-Americans and Argentineans, except for low positive affect; (2) Native Americans tended to favor somatic symptoms over affective (depressive) symptoms; (3) responses to positive affect questions could possibly be biased not only for Japanese but also for people in North America; i.e., the expression of positive affect might be enhanced in North American culture, while inhibited in Japanese culture.
Notes:
Stephen L Buka (2002)  Disparities in health status and substance use: ethnicity and socioeconomic factors.   Public Health Rep 117 Suppl 1: S118-S125  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: This article reviews the literature on racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities in morbidity and mortality, focusing on substance use and abuse. OBSERVATIONS: In most populations and societies, people of higher social position live longer and remain healthier than those of lower position. Disparities in morbidity and mortality across ethnic groups also exist. Mortality rates for African Americans are about 1.6 times higher than those for white, with much higher disparities for certain causes, such as HIV/AIDS and diabetes. Disparities also exist in the level of substance use and abuse. CONCLUSION: Racial and ethnic differences in health and health behaviors, including substance use and abuse, may partly reflect biological differences, but it is more likely that they can be explained largely by socioeconomic differences, cultural factors, and prejudice and discrimination, both institutional and individual.
Notes:
Sean F Reardon, Stephen L Buka (2002)  Differences in onset and persistence of substance abuse and dependence among whites, blacks, and Hispanics.   Public Health Rep 117 Suppl 1: S51-S59  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: This article describes patterns of onset, persistence, and cessation of substance abuse among whites, blacks, and Hispanics that are masked in cross-sectional prevalence data. METHODS: The authors analyzed longitudinal data from a sample of 1,004 white, black, and Hispanic respondents from Chicago to investigate processes of onset, persistence, and cessation of substance abuse and dependence for two age cohorts, 15 and 18 at baseline and 17 and 20 at follow-up. RESULTS: The data show few racial or ethnic differences in the prevalence of alcohol and marijuana abuse and dependence at age 15. Rates of onset of alcohol abuse and dependence among whites between ages 15 and 17 were significantly higher than for blacks and Hispanics, and the rates of onset of marijuana abuse and dependence among blacks between ages 18 and 20 were significantly higher than for whites and Hispanics of the same age group. There were few significant differences among the three groups in the persistence rates of abuse and dependence. CONCLUSION: By age 20 the rates of marijuana abuse and dependence are significantly higher among blacks than among whites and Hispanics.
Notes:
Scott P Novak, Sean F Reardon, Stephen L Buka (2002)  How beliefs about substance use differ by socio-demographic characteristics, individual experiences, and neighborhood environments among urban adolescents.   J Drug Educ 32: 4. 319-342  
Abstract: In this article, we tested a series of Item Response Theory (IRT) models to examine the individual and neighborhood variation in perceived risk along dimensions of substance use (alcohol, marijuana, and hard drugs) and usage patterns (light/experimental use, moderate use, heavy/regular use). Data were gathered from 2266 adolescents aged 9, 12, and 15 residing in 79 Chicago neighborhoods. Developmental patterns for age and amount of use were observed whereby older respondents rated alcohol and marijuana as less harmful compared to the younger respondents, but rated hard drugs as more harmful. Risk perceptions were found to be more closely tied to one's direct experience with drugs rather than a general constellation of beliefs. Neighborhood variation in risk perceptions was also observed for hard drugs and three patterns of use, controlling for characteristics of individual residents. Neighborhoods did not vary in risk perceptions toward alcohol use. Individual-level factors rather than characteristics of the neighborhoods explained the observed neighborhood variation in perceptions toward marijuana use. These findings illustrate the complex links between individual and contextual factors in the development of beliefs about the health risks associated with substance use.
Notes:
2001
B E Molnar, S L Buka, R C Kessler (2001)  Child sexual abuse and subsequent psychopathology: results from the National Comorbidity Survey.   Am J Public Health 91: 5. 753-760 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study examined the relationship between child sexual abuse (CSA) and subsequent onset of psychiatric disorders, accounting for other childhood adversities, CSA type, and chronicity of the abuse. METHODS: Retrospective reports of CSA, other adversities, and psychiatric disorders were obtained by the National Comorbidity Survey, a nationally representative survey of the United States (n = 5877). Reports were analyzed by multivariate methods. RESULTS: CSA was reported by 13.5% of women and 2.5% of men. When other childhood adversities were controlled for, significant associations were found between CSA and subsequent onset of 14 mood, anxiety, and substance use disorders among women and 5 among men. In a subsample of respondents reporting no other adversities, odds of depression and substance problems associated with CSA were higher. Among women, rape (vs molestation), knowing the perpetrator (vs strangers), and chronicity of CSA (vs isolated incidents) were associated with higher odds of some disorders. CONCLUSIONS: CSA usually occurs as part of a larger syndrome of childhood adversities. Nonetheless, CSA, whether alone or in a larger adversity cluster, is associated with substantial increased risk of subsequent psychopathology.
Notes:
R Niaura, B Bock, E E Lloyd, R Brown, L P Lipsitt, S Buka (2001)  Maternal transmission of nicotine dependence: psychiatric, neurocognitive and prenatal factors.   Am J Addict 10: 1. 16-29  
Abstract: This paper reviews the literature on maternal influences on smoking behaviors of offspring from the perspective of neuropsychiatric deficits that may be transmitted from mother to child. In particular, we review what is known regarding associations between: (1) in-utero exposure to smoking, (2) adolescent neurocognitive functioning and psychiatric comorbidity, and (3) the patterns of smoking and progression of nicotine dependence. Furthering our knowledge of these differences in susceptibility to nicotine dependence among youth will provide additional avenues for prevention and intervention efforts targeted toward those at high risk for dependence.
Notes:
S L Buka, T L Stichick, I Birdthistle, F J Earls (2001)  Youth exposure to violence: prevalence, risks, and consequences.   Am J Orthopsychiatry 71: 3. 298-310 Jul  
Abstract: Recent empirical work on the distribution, determinants, and consequences of children and adolescents' witnessing of community violence are reviewed. Major findings across studies indicate that males, ethnic minorities, and urban residents are at increased risk for witnessing violence, and that higher rates of PTSD, depression, distress, aggression, and externalizing behavior disturbances are reported among those who witness violence. Degree of family conflict, domestic violence, and family support were demonstrated to modify the impact of exposure to violence. Research and policy recommendations are offered.
Notes:
B E Molnar, L F Berkman, S L Buka (2001)  Psychopathology, childhood sexual abuse and other childhood adversities: relative links to subsequent suicidal behaviour in the US.   Psychol Med 31: 6. 965-977 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Research shows that psychopathology, child sexual abuse and other childhood adversities are risk factors for suicide. However, few have investigated their joint and independent roles in the pursuit of a reliable, predictive model of suicidal behaviour. METHODS: Data are from the National Comorbidity Survey (N = 5877), a nationally representative study of prevalence, risk factors, and social consequences of psychiatric disorders in the US. Discrete time survival analysis and population attributable risk methodologies were utilized. RESULTS: Among those sexually abused as children, odds of suicide attempts were 2-4 times higher among women and 4-11 times higher among men, compared with those not abused, controlling for other adversities. Odds ratios were reduced but most remained statistically significant after adjusting for lifetime psychiatric illnesses preceding suicide attempts. In the same predictive equation, 79% of serious suicide attempts among women could be attributed to psychiatric disorders while 12% was attributable to rape and 7% to molestation. The highest probability of a first attempt was during early adolescence for those who were sexually abused and had a lifetime disorder, but it was 8-12 years older for those sexually abused without any disorders. CONCLUSIONS: In the US, a strong association exists between child sexual abuse and suicidal behaviour, mediated by psychopathology. There is a substantial proportion of suicide risk attributable to child sexual abuse beyond the presence of psychopathology and other adversities. From a clinical standpoint, abuse survivors represent a high-risk population for suicidal behaviour. Further research into this preventable antecedent of suicide attempts is necessary.
Notes:
S L Buka, M T Tsuang, E F Torrey, M A Klebanoff, R L Wagner, R H Yolken (2001)  Maternal cytokine levels during pregnancy and adult psychosis.   Brain Behav Immun 15: 4. 411-420 Dec  
Abstract: We investigated levels of maternal cytokines in late pregnancy in relation to the subsequent development of adult schizophrenia and other psychoses in their offspring. The sample included the mothers of 27 adults with schizophrenia and other psychotic illnesses and 50 matched unaffected controls from the Providence cohort of the Collaborative Perinatal Project. Serum samples were analyzed for interleukin 1 beta (IL-1-beta), interleukin 2 (IL-2), interleukin 6 (IL-6), interleukin 8 (IL-8), and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) by enzyme immunoassay. Maternal levels of TNF-alpha were significantly elevated among the case series (t = 2.22, p =.04), with evidence of increasing odds of psychosis in relation to higher cytokine levels. We did not find significant differences between case and control mothers in the serum levels of IL-1, IL-2, IL-6, or IL-8. These data support previous clinical investigations reporting maternal infections during pregnancy as a potential risk factor for psychotic illness among offspring.
Notes:
S L Buka, M T Tsuang, E F Torrey, M A Klebanoff, D Bernstein, R H Yolken (2001)  Maternal infections and subsequent psychosis among offspring.   Arch Gen Psychiatry 58: 11. 1032-1037 Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: We tested the hypothesis that maternal infections during pregnancy are associated with the subsequent development of schizophrenia and other psychoses in adulthood. METHODS: We conducted a nested case-control study of 27 adults with schizophrenia and other psychotic illnesses and 54 matched unaffected control subjects (matched for sex, ethnicity, and date of birth) from the Providence, RI, cohort of the Collaborative Perinatal Project. We retrieved stored blood samples that had been obtained from these mothers at the end of pregnancy. These samples were analyzed for total class-specific immunoglobulins and for specific antibodies directed at recognized perinatal pathogens capable of affecting brain development. RESULTS: Maternal levels of IgG and IgM class immunoglobulins before the mothers were delivered of their neonates were significantly elevated among the case series (t = 3.06, P =.003; t = 2.93, P =.004, respectively, for IgG and IgM immunoglobulin-albumin ratios). Secondary analyses indicated a significant association between maternal antibodies to herpes simplex virus type 2 glycoprotein gG2 and subsequent psychotic illness (matched t test = 2.43, P =.02). We did not find significant differences between case and control mothers in the serum levels of IgA class immunoglobulins, or in specific IgG antibodies to herpes simplex virus type 1, cytomegalovirus, Toxoplasma gondii, rubella virus, human parvovirus B19, Chlamydia trachomatis, or human papillomavirus type 16. CONCLUSIONS: The offspring of mothers with elevated levels of total IgG and IgM immunoglobulins and antibodies to herpes simplex virus type 2 are at increased risk for the development of schizophrenia and other psychotic illnesses in adulthood.
Notes:
2000
G L Zornberg, S L Buka, M T Tsuang (2000)  The problem of obstetrical complications and schizophrenia.   Schizophr Bull 26: 2. 249-256  
Abstract: The use of the term "obstetrical complications" (OCs) and its variations to encompass diverse physiological mechanisms (e.g., genetic, ischemic, hemorrhagic, infectious) of disruption to fetal/neonatal brain development has engendered inconsistency, confusion, and controversy. The principal reason is that the term OCs belies the absence of a fully adequate conceptual framework for characterizing neurodevelopmental risk. We propose that neurodevelopmental risk factors for schizophrenia can be assessed more clearly if broad OC scales are replaced by measures representing more homogeneous pathways of disturbed brain development. Using a new OC classification, we found that disordered growth related to hypoxic-ischemic compromise to early brain development may confer an elevated risk of schizophrenia and other adult-onset psychoses, particularly in the presence of familial risk. Abnormal fetal and neonatal brain growth and development in schizophrenia and OCs may also, at least in part, result from genetic factors and could help explain the relation between seemingly inconsistent OCs identified in prior research.
Notes:
G L Zornberg, S L Buka, M T Tsuang (2000)  Hypoxic-ischemia-related fetal/neonatal complications and risk of schizophrenia and other nonaffective psychoses: a 19-year longitudinal study.   Am J Psychiatry 157: 2. 196-202 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Epidemiologic evidence linking obstetric complications to schizophrenia has been positive but inconclusive. One reason for the lack of conclusive evidence may be the inconsistency in measuring disturbances of fetal/neonatal brain development based on general obstetric markers of maternal health. The authors used data from the National Collaborative Perinatal Project to examine the relationship between schizophrenia and other nonaffective psychoses and a theoretically derived measure of hypoxic-ischemia-related fetal/neonatal complications. METHOD: Six hundred ninety-three men and women (average age 23) born to a community sample of women between 1959 and 1966 were followed up an average of 19 years after early childhood assessments. Subjects with DSM-IV schizophrenia and other nonaffective psychoses were identified using the Diagnostic Interview Schedule and best-estimate consensus diagnoses. RESULTS: Hypoxic-ischemia-related fetal/neonatal complications were associated with a doubling of the risk of developing a psychotic disorder, compared with no relevant complications (6.9% versus 1.4%). When mood disorders were excluded from the group of psychotic diagnoses, the risk of schizophrenia and other nonaffective psychoses associated with hypoxic-ischemia-related fetal/neonatal complications was strikingly elevated, compared with no relevant complications (5.75% versus 0.39%). Nonpsychotic mood disorders were unrelated to these fetal/neonatal complications. Schizophrenia and other nonaffective psychoses were most strongly associated with hypoxic-ischemia-related fetal/neonatal complications of disordered growth and development. CONCLUSIONS: The data show a strikingly elevated, graded, independent risk of schizophrenia and other nonaffective psychoses associated with this classification of antecedent hypoxic-ischemia-related fetal/neonatal complications.
Notes:
L J Seidman, S L Buka, J M Goldstein, N J Horton, R O Rieder, M T Tsuang (2000)  The relationship of prenatal and perinatal complications to cognitive functioning at age 7 in the New England Cohorts of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project.   Schizophr Bull 26: 2. 309-321  
Abstract: Previous literature shows that children who later develop schizophrenia have elevated rates of prenatal and perinatal complications (PPCs) and neuropsychological deficits in childhood. However, little is known about the relationship of these risk factors to each other. We evaluated the relationship between PPCs and neuropsychological functioning at age 7 in a large epidemiological study of pregnancy, birth, and development: the National Collaborative Perinatal Project (NCPP). Thirteen standardized measures of cognitive abilities were acquired on 11,889 children at approximately age 7. Principal components analysis was used to create three neuropsychological measures: academic achievement skills, verbal-conceptual abilities, and perceptual-motor abilities. We measured the relationship between these factors and three measures of PPCs: low birth weight (LBW), probable hypoxicischemic complications, and chronic hypoxia. All three measures of PPCs were significantly associated with lower neuropsychological performance, after controlling for various confounders. LBW had the strongest association with neuropsychological performance, followed by an index of presumed hypoxic insults. The effect sizes between PPCs and cognitive factors at age 7 were consistently largest with perceptual-motor abilities, followed by academic achievement skills and verbal-conceptual abilities. Future studies will evaluate the effects of specific PPCs and genetic risk factors for psychosis on cognitive functioning in childhood.
Notes:
S L Buka, J M Goldstein, L J Seidman, M T Tsuang (2000)  Maternal recall of pregnancy history: accuracy and bias in schizophrenia research.   Schizophr Bull 26: 2. 335-350  
Abstract: Most investigations that report a positive association between obstetric complications and schizophrenia have been case-control studies that are often based on long-term maternal recall of events during pregnancy. We tested the hypothesis that mothers of adult offspring with schizophrenia or other psychoses systematically overreport obstetric complications compared with mothers of unaffected offspring. Subjects were selected from the New England cohorts of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project, a large prospective cohort with well-documented records of pregnancy and delivery. Mothers of 39 offspring with psychosis and 39 control offspring were recontacted and completed a structured interview regarding their pregnancy history. Accuracy of maternal recall varied greatly in relation to the type of pregnancy event, and recall was inaccurate for many specific events. For the control sample only, maternal recall of the total number of complications corresponded closely to chart information. Contrary to the study hypothesis, mothers of offspring with psychosis report fewer complications than indicated in their obstetric records, with no evidence of positive recall bias. These results suggest that previous reports of a positive association between obstetric complications and schizophrenia are not likely to have resulted from biased maternal recall.
Notes:
Shenassa, Catlin, Buka (2000)  Gun availability, psychopathology, and risk of death from suicide attempt by gun.   Ann Epidemiol 10: 7. Oct  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Suicide is the third leading cause of death among adolescents and the 8th leading cause of death overall. Guns figure prominently in this problem. Guns are the most lethal means of suicide, and in the United States about 60% of all suicides are committed by guns. We examined hospital admissions for suicide attempts (para-suicide) in the city of Chicago between 1990-1997. Our aim was to 1) quantify the risk of death from para-suicide by gun versus other methods, 2) determine whether individual with psychopathology are more likely than others to attempt suicide by gun, 3) determine proportion of variation in para-suicide by gun explained by community-level gun availability independent of individual-level determinants of para-suicide by gun.METHODS: Hospital admissions from city of Chicago during 1990-1997 were examined for cases of attempted or completed suicide. 11,584 individuals were identified with a diagnosis of para-suicide (E950-E959, classifiable to ICD-9CM). These individuals were then classified into suicide type (e.g., gun, crash, cut, poison) and were also identified as having a mental disorder or not (mental diagnoses classifiable to ICD-9CM).RESULTS: 1) Those attempting suicide by gun are about 70 times more likely to die from their injuries than those attempting suicide by other means. 2) Depressed and psychotic individuals compared with individuals with no-mental disorders are significantly more likely to attempt suicide with a gun (p < 0.001). 3) Inclusion of community-level gun availability in a hierarchical model reduced the variation in the model by 16%.CONCLUSIONS: Guns are the most lethal suicide method. Community-level availability, independent of individual-level factors, is an important determinant of suicide attempt by gun.
Notes:
J M Goldstein, L J Seidman, S L Buka, N J Horton, J L Donatelli, R O Rieder, M T Tsuang (2000)  Impact of genetic vulnerability and hypoxia on overall intelligence by age 7 in offspring at high risk for schizophrenia compared with affective psychoses.   Schizophr Bull 26: 2. 323-334  
Abstract: Risk factors for schizophrenia, such as genetic vulnerability and obstetric complications, have been associated with cognitive deficits in schizophrenia. We tested the association of these risk factors with general intellectual ability in offspring at high risk for psychoses and normal control subjects. Offspring of 182 parents with DSM-IV schizophrenia or affective psychoses were recruited and diagnosed from the Boston and Providence cohorts of the National Collaborative Perinatal Project (NCPP). Control subjects from the NCPP were selected to be comparable with affected parents based on the parent's age, ethnicity, study site, number of offspring enrolled in the NCPP, and payment status, and on the offspring's age, sex, and history of obstetric complications. Based on data prospectively acquired from pregnancy and events of gestation, labor, delivery, and the neonatal period, we derived a measure of probable hypoxic-ischemic insult. We also report on standardized measures of general intelligence (intelligence quotient [IQ]) collected at age 7. General linear mixed models were used to test for the simultaneous effects of genetic vulnerability, defined as parental diagnosis, and probable hypoxic insult on age 7 IQ. Specificity of the effects for schizophrenia compared with affective psychoses and sex effects were also tested. Low IQ at age 7 was significantly associated with genetic vulnerability to psychoses, in particular with schizophrenia.
Notes:
K Nyberg, S L Buka, L P Lipsitt (2000)  Perinatal medication as a potential risk factor for adult drug abuse in a North American cohort.   Epidemiology 11: 6. 715-716 Nov  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to explore perinatal exposures to medications as risk factors for adult drug abuse. We compared 69 drug abusing subjects and their 33 non-abusing siblings with regard to history of labor pain analgesia during birth and other obstetric variables. Three or more doses of opiates or barbiturates at birth yielded an OR of 4.7 (95% CI = 1.0-44.1) for becoming a drug abuser after multiple perinatal drug exposure.
Notes:
1999
S L Buka, I J Birdthistle (1999)  Long-term effects of a community-wide alcohol server training intervention.   J Stud Alcohol 60: 1. 27-36 Jan  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The Rhode Island Community Alcohol Abuse and Injury Prevention Project (CAAIPP), implemented from 1984 through 1989, employed the "community gatekeeper" approach to reduce alcohol-related injuries and deaths. Targeting alcohol servers rather than drinkers, community-wide interventions were designed and implemented to encourage responsible serving behaviors through the adoption of techniques of responsible service. The primary goal of the CAAIPP server intervention evaluation was to assess both short-term and long-term changes in behavior of alcohol beverage servers who were recipients of CAAIPP training. METHOD: A 5-hour training curriculum on "Responsible Alcohol Service" was offered to all alcohol servers in a randomly selected study community. A prospective study design was used to evaluate long-term changes in the self-reported behavior of 321 trainees using three time-points over 5 years. A cross-sectional survey was conducted 4 years posttraining to compare rates of self-reported server behaviors in the intervention community (n = 106) with two comparison communities (nA = 56, nB = 49). RESULTS: Fifteen months after training, trainees reported significantly higher levels of desired serving behavior than nontrained servers. Though positive effects of server training diminished with time, responsible serving behavior 4 years posttraining remained higher than pretraining levels. The impact appeared greatest for servers with fewer years serving experience, wait-persons, younger servers and servers who worked in establishments without written policies regarding serving practices. CONCLUSIONS: The results with regard to modifying server behavior are positive and indicate that server interventions shown to be efficacious should be implemented. Training programs that target specific serving skills in repeat sessions may be most promising for improving server behavior, particularly among both young and new servers working in establishments without written policies regarding serving practices.
Notes:
V Yiu, S Buka, D Zurakowski, M McCormick, B Brenner, K Jabs (1999)  Relationship between birthweight and blood pressure in childhood.   Am J Kidney Dis 33: 2. 253-260 Feb  
Abstract: Studies have shown an inverse relationship between birthweight and blood pressure in later life. The objective of this study is to analyze the relationship between birthweight and blood pressure in childhood in a North American-based population. Data on 2,958 births with follow-up at 7 years of age from the Providence, RI, cohort of the Collaborative Perinatal Project of the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke were retrospectively analyzed using univariate and multivariate analytic methods. Bivariate analysis of the total cohort showed a direct relationship between follow-up weight at age 7 years and birthweight (r = 0.24; P < 0.001) and follow-up weight with systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP; r = 0.33; P < 0.001 and r = 0.22; P < 0.001, respectively). On multivariate analysis, follow-up weight and height were the strongest predictors of SBP and DBP. There was also a significant inverse relationship between birthweight and SBP. A cohort of term infants (n = 2,561) was subdivided into birthweight-for-gestational-age groupings to further evaluate the effects of birthweight on blood pressure. Small-for-gestational-age (SGA) infants were markedly smaller at age 7 years than those large-for-gestational-age (LGA; 21 +/- 4 kg v 26 +/- 4 kg; P < 0.01). Despite the direct association between follow-up weight and blood pressure, the mean blood pressure did not differ between SGA (103/58 mm Hg) and LGA patients (103/59 mm Hg). To assess whether birthweight was an independent predictor of blood pressure, blood pressures were predicted using linear regression equations. For every 1-kg decrease in birthweight in term infants, SBP at 7 years increased by 1.3 mm Hg and DBP by 0.6 mm Hg. In conclusion, controlling for weight and height in term infants at 7 years of age has an inverse linear effect on blood pressure. This suggests that birthweight in relation to gestation may be a contributor to the multifactorial cause of essential hypertension.
Notes:
S L Buka, A P Fan (1999)  Association of prenatal and perinatal complications with subsequent bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.   Schizophr Res 39: 2. 113-9; discussion 160-1 Sep  
Abstract: This paper presents an overview of the recent literature on the association between prenatal and perinatal complications (PPCs) and schizophrenia, then systematically reviews papers published later than 1965 examining the association of PPCs and bipolar disorder. Three of the four studies comparing bipolar cases with normal controls indicated a positive association of PPCs with the development of bipolar disorder in adult life; the four odds ratios ranged from 1.0 to 12.0. The proportion of PPCs among the bipolar samples without comparison subjects ranged from 3.8% to 50.0%. Issues of study design, measurement and severity of exposure, and outcome are addressed. This review suggests that further investigation of genetic interactions, gender differences, and the specificity of effects in the association between PPCs and mental disorders other than schizophrenia is warranted.
Notes:
C A Tomeo, J W Rich-Edwards, K B Michels, C S Berkey, D J Hunter, A L Frazier, W C Willett, S L Buka (1999)  Reproducibility and validity of maternal recall of pregnancy-related events.   Epidemiology 10: 6. 774-777 Nov  
Abstract: We assessed the reproducibility and validity of a questionnaire that asks mothers to recall pregnancy-related events from thirty or more years ago. Among 146 women who completed the questionnaire twice, responses were highly reproducible for pre-pregnancy height and weight (r = 0.95), pregnancy complications (r = 0.74), substance use (r = 0.80), preterm delivery (r = 0.82), birthweight (r = 0.94), and breastfeeding (r = 0.89). Among 154 women whose questionnaire responses were compared to data collected during their pregnancies, recall was highly accurate for height (r = 0.90), pre-pregnancy weight (r = 0.86), birthweight (r = 0.91), and smoking (sensitivity = 0.86, specificity = 0.94). These findings suggest that long-term maternal recall is both reproducible and accurate for many factors related to pregnancy and delivery.
Notes:
1998
W S Kremen, S L Buka, L J Seidman, J M Goldstein, D Koren, M T Tsuang (1998)  IQ decline during childhood and adult psychotic symptoms in a community sample: a 19-year longitudinal study.   Am J Psychiatry 155: 5. 672-677 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The goal of this study was to examine cognitive antecedents of psychosis by determining whether variability in IQ during childhood was predictive of psychotic symptoms in adulthood. METHOD: Deviant responder analyses were used to examine prospectively the relationship of IQ at ages 4 and 7 to psychotic symptoms at age 23 in 547 offspring from a community sample (National Collaborative Perinatal Project) that was unselected for psychiatric illness. The authors compared three hypotheses: that 1) low IQ, 2) large IQ fluctuations regardless of direction, or 3) large IQ declines would predict the presence of adult psychotic symptoms. RESULTS: The 10% of individuals with substantially larger than expected IQ declines from age 4 to 7 had a rate of psychotic, but not other psychiatric, symptoms at age 23 that was nearly seven times as high as the rate for other persons. Parental socioeconomic status and IQ at age 7 also predicted adult psychotic symptoms. However, when IQ at age 7, IQ decline between ages 4 and 7, and socioeconomic status were all included in a logistic regression analysis, only IQ decline remained significant. CONCLUSIONS: There is an increased likelihood of developing psychotic symptoms in adulthood for a subgroup of individuals with substantially greater than expected IQ declines during childhood. IQ decline is specific for psychotic symptoms, but follow-up assessment when the study participants are further into the age of risk will be necessary to determine specificity for schizophrenia. The authors discuss the implications of this early cognitive downturn for a neurodevelopmental view of schizophrenia.
Notes:
M B Selner-O'Hagan, D J Kindlon, S L Buka, S W Raudenbush, F J Earls (1998)  Assessing exposure to violence in urban youth.   J Child Psychol Psychiatry 39: 2. 215-224 Feb  
Abstract: This study reports on the development of a structured interview, My Exposure to Violence (My ETV), that was designed to assess child and youth exposure to violence. Eighty participants between the ages of 9 and 24 were assessed. Data from My ETV were fit to a Rasch model for rating scales, a technique that generates interval level measures and allows the characterization of both chronic and acute exposure. Results indicated that the fit statistics for six scales, covering both lifetime and past year victimization, witnessing of violence, and total exposure, were all good. These scales were found to have high internal consistency (r = .68 to .93) and test-retest reliability (r = .75 to .94). Evidence of construct validity was provided by the item analysis, which revealed a theoretically sensible ordering of item extremity, and also by analysis of bivariate associations. As expected, younger subjects generally reported less exposure to violence than did older subjects, males reported more exposure than did females, African-American subjects reported higher levels of exposure than did White subjects, violent offenders reported more exposure than did non-offenders, and those living in high crime areas reported more exposure than did those residing in low crime areas. Future areas of investigation and the potential contribution to studies of antisocial behavior and post-traumatic stress disorder are discussed.
Notes:
C L Zhang, L Z Yu, F L Gu, S D Buka, S L Zu, S S Xie, Z Y Pan (1998)  Targeted diagnosis of bladder and ureteral carcinoma using radiolabelled BDI-1.   Urol Res 26: 5. 343-348  
Abstract: The aim of this study is to investigate the possibility of radioimmunoimaging (RII) by radiolabelled anti-bladder carcinoma monoclonal antibody BDI-1 applied to diagnosis of bladder cancer and ureteral cancer. BDI-1 was labelled with 131I and 99mTc. The immunoreactivity, pharmacokinetics and biodistribution in mice were studied. RII was performed in 46 patients. The results showed that 131I, 99mTc-BDI-1 have satisfactory immunoreactivity and excellent tumor-locating properties. The blood clearance half-life T1/2alpha and T1/2beta were 35 h in the first phase and 151 h in the second phase, respectively. Thirty-nine patients were studied by an intravesical administration method; the sensitivity was 90.5%. Seven patients were studied by an intravenous administration method. The RII results of three cases with primary or recurrent bladder cancer and three cases with ureteral cancer were confirmed histologically. RII was negative in one patient with suspected lung metastasis that was shown on radiography. The investigation revealed that RII can be used as an auxiliary method for the detection of bladder cancer and may be valuable for the diagnosis of ureteral cancer.
Notes:
M A Klebanoff, B S Zemel, S Buka, S Zierler (1998)  Long-term follow-up of participants in the Collaborative Perinatal Project: tracking the next generation.   Paediatr Perinat Epidemiol 12: 3. 334-346 Jul  
Abstract: This report describes the methods used in conducting a long-term follow-up study and the factors associated with the successful location of subjects. In 1987-91, we selected, from among the women who were born in 1959-66 as members of the Philadelphia and Providence cohorts of the Collaborative Perinatal Project (CPP), 391 who were preterm at birth, 413 who were small-for-gestational age (SGA) and 978 who were term and appropriately grown; 1314 were from Philadelphia and 468 from Providence. Tracing was accomplished using original CPP records, telephone directories, voter registration and driver's licence records, birth certificate files and credit bureaux. A total of 61% of the women were located, 55% at Philadelphia and 77% at Providence. After adjustment, the odds ratio for ease of location, compared with women who were term and appropriately grown, was 0.85 [95% CI 0.66-1.11] for women who were preterm and 1.02 [0.78-1.34] for women who were SGA. In Philadelphia, African-American women were more likely than white women to be located, but in Providence, African-American women were less likely than white women to be located. Women whose own mothers were older at the time of their birth were more likely to be located, as were those who had more siblings followed in the CPP. Compared with women who did not complete their original CPP examinations at ages 4 and 7 years, those whose original CPP follow-up was more complete were more likely to be located. These findings demonstrate that long-term follow up in a US urban setting can be accomplished, and that successful location was not associated with birth status.
Notes:
1997
R B Goldstein, S L Buka (1997)  Perceived effectiveness of community-based measures against alcohol misuse among "problem" and "nonproblem" drinkers.   Subst Use Misuse 32: 5. 507-554 Apr  
Abstract: Perceptions of the effectiveness of 11 measures against alcohol misuse were examined in a community survey. School-based programming was most often and increased alcohol taxation least often rated effective. Binge drinking in the past year and male gender were inversely associated with perceived effectiveness, particularly of countermeasures with direct personal impact, including stricter enforcement of laws against driving while intoxicated and increased taxation. Studies of support for alcohol control have reported similar relationships between drinking behavior and support for measures imposing personal restrictions. Perceived effectiveness and support thus appear to be related yet distinct constructs. Improved understanding of the interrelationships among perceived effectiveness, support, drinking behavior, and empirically demonstrated effectiveness of countermeasures may aid in identifying strategies which are both effective and acceptable to targeted populations.
Notes:
E Y Deykin, S L Buka (1997)  Prevalence and risk factors for posttraumatic stress disorder among chemically dependent adolescents.   Am J Psychiatry 154: 6. 752-757 Jun  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: This study ascertained the prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among chemically dependent adolescents and identified factors that influence the risk of PTSD after a qualifying trauma. METHOD: The study group consisted of 297 adolescents aged 15-19 years who met the DSM-III-R criteria for dependence on alcohol or other drugs and who were receiving treatment in seven publicly funded Massachusetts facilities. PTSD and other axis I diagnoses were assessed by the Diagnostic Interview Schedule. Data on risk factors were collected by a specially constructed interview schedule. RESULTS: The lifetime prevalence of PTSD was 29.6% (24.3% for males and 45.3% for females), and the current prevalence was 19.2% (12.2% for males and 40.0% for females). These prevalences reflect a high occurrence of traumatic exposures and a high case rate among those who experienced trauma. The risk of PTSD varied with the nature of the trauma, the number of traumas experienced, psychiatric comorbidity, and familial characteristics. The higher rate of PTSD among females was due to a greater frequency of rape, which carries a high risk of PTSD development, and to a high rate of comorbid conditions. CONCLUSIONS: The lifetime prevalence of PTSD among these chemically dependent adolescents is five times that reported for a community sample of adolescents. This extremely high rate provides new understanding of the etiologic connection between PTSD and chemical dependence and has implications for their treatment.
Notes:
1996
R H Wharton, K R Levine, S Buka, L Emanuel (1996)  Advance care planning for children with special health care needs: a survey of parental attitudes.   Pediatrics 97: 5. 682-687 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES. This study explored parental attitudes about their interactions with their children's providers when decision making involved critical life situations. We evaluated parents' attitudes regarding the following questions: What was the parents' understanding of their children's health care issues, and what was the parental perception of the professionals' understanding of their children and of themselves? Who should be the principal decision makers for the children? What was the parents' knowledge about advance directives? Did parents want to participate in a process of advance planning to assist with critical life decision making for their children? METHODS. We surveyed all parents attending a conference sponsored by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health for parents of children with special needs. The questionnaire was provided to all parents attending the conference. An announcement was made at the conference requesting parental participation. The 76 respondents constitute a convenience sample of parents of children with special needs sufficient for this preliminary stage of investigation. RESULTS. Of 177 parents attending the conference, 76 (43%) completed the questionnaire. Eighty-eight percent of the participants strongly agreed that they understood their children's conditions. Twenty-one percent stated that they had sufficient understanding of their children's future medical needs, and 21% thought that they had a sufficient understanding of their children's developmental potential. Ninety-nine percent of parents strongly agreed that physicians should share information with parents no matter how serious or potentially upsetting. Ninety-four percent of those parents who thought that their children's physicians understood their own needs also thought that the physicians understood their children's needs. In contrast, only half (55%) of those parents who thought the physicians did not understand their needs thought the physicians understood their children's needs. Ninety-two percent of parents who thought that the physicians understood their needs agreed that the physicians would make the best decisions in crises versus 60% of those who did not think the physicians understood their needs. Seventy-four percent stated that they would consider written guidelines for their children that dealt with critical life situations. All parents who thought their children's conditions were not understood wanted written guidelines. Of those parents who had thought their children would not survive (15 parents), 94% wanted written guidelines. All seven parents who had been told their children would not survive wanted written guidelines. CONCLUSIONS. Parents in this study were generally satisfied with care being provided to their children. Nevertheless, the results clearly suggest goals that could lead to improved capacity for parents and providers to make critical life decisions for and with children. First, physicians must understand the needs of parents to be able to make decisions that would be in the children's best interests. Second, parents should participate fully in critical life decisions for their children and should use written guidelines to assist with the process of these critical life decisions. Our findings strongly support the development of a longitudinal process, initiated early after the onset or discovery of illness and maintained longitudinally throughout the course of a child's illness, to help parents and providers work together in this vital area of health care to children.
Notes:
1995
R L Clapper, S L Buka, E C Goldfield, L P Lipsitt, M T Tsuang (1995)  Adolescent problem behaviors as predictors of adult alcohol diagnoses.   Int J Addict 30: 5. 507-523 Apr  
Abstract: Young adult alcohol problems based on DIS/DSM III diagnoses were predicted from a number of adolescent risky/antisocial behaviors in a sample of 693 subjects. The number of times an individual was intoxicated before his/her sixteenth birthday was the best indicator of adult alcohol "abuse" and /or dependence, with adolescent fighting, arrests, and lack of participation in religious activities also serving as important problem behavior predictors. Results of correlational and principal-components analyses of adolescent problem behaviors are similar to previous work on Problem Behavior Theory. The results suggest that prevention efforts should begin before adolescence, prior to the time when individuals are exposed to, or begin practicing, adult health-threatening activities.
Notes:
1994
E Y Deykin, S L Buka (1994)  Suicidal ideation and attempts among chemically dependent adolescents.   Am J Public Health 84: 4. 634-639 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES. Suicidal ideation and attempts were examined in a population of chemically dependent adolescents, a group at high risk of self-destructive behavior. METHODS. The prevalence and correlates of suicidality and of major depressive disorder were assessed by the Diagnostic Interview Schedule and a structured family and social history interview with 300 addicts aged 15 through 19 years. RESULTS. Suicidal ideation was reported by 31% to 75% of the subjects and suicide attempts were reported by 28% to 61%, with females predominating. Thoughts of suicide combined with prolonged thoughts of death in general and a desire to be dead were highly associated with suicide attempts. Exposure to physical or sexual abuse was associated with a significantly increased risk of suicide attempts for males but not for females. CONCLUSIONS. The probability of a suicide attempt increases when thoughts of suicide coincide with morbid ideation of extended duration, suggesting that risk assessment should be based on duration as well as presence of morbid thoughts. Substance abuse treatment requires an assessment of suicidal potential and counseling for those whose potential is high, with special attention to males exposed to abuse.
Notes:
1993
S Buka, F Earls (1993)  Early determinants of delinquency and violence.   Health Aff (Millwood) 12: 4. 46-64  
Abstract: The past several decades have resulted in an explosion of knowledge about the development of young children, knowledge that is often underused in the policy-making process. This paper reviews established risk factors for later delinquency and violence that are present prior to school age. The results suggest that established population-based efforts in education and health should be expanded, in anticipation of reducing violent behavior. More intensive intervention efforts that provide a continuum of services for children and families during a vulnerable development period also are warranted. New research directions also are described.
Notes:
S L Buka, M T Tsuang, L P Lipsitt (1993)  Pregnancy/delivery complications and psychiatric diagnosis. A prospective study.   Arch Gen Psychiatry 50: 2. 151-156 Feb  
Abstract: We examined the hypothesis that pregnancy and delivery complications result in increased risk for the development of psychiatric disorders. The study sample included 1068 pregnancies classified as chronic fetal hypoxia, other complications, preterm birth, or normal pregnancy/delivery that had initially been studied prospectively from the prenatal period through age 7 years. Subjects were recontacted (ages 18 to 27 years) and lifetime psychiatric diagnoses made with the Diagnostic Interview Schedule. Preterm subjects had significantly higher rates of cognitive impairment. Subjects with chronic fetal hypoxia had higher rates of both cognitive impairment and psychotic disorders, although these differences failed to reach statistical significance due to the small number of cases. With these exceptions, the data did not support the hypothesis that rates of psychiatric disorders are higher among subjects born with complications of pregnancy and delivery than among normal controls born without complications.
Notes:
1992
E Y Deykin, S L Buka, T H Zeena (1992)  Depressive illness among chemically dependent adolescents.   Am J Psychiatry 149: 10. 1341-1347 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence and correlates of depression among adolescents being treated for chemical dependence. METHOD: Using the National Institute of Mental Health Diagnostic Interview Schedule, the authors interviewed 223 adolescents, aged 15-19 years, who were in residential treatment for alcohol or drug dependence diagnosed according to DSM-III-R criteria. Data on sociodemographic characteristics, school and social performance, past history, family composition, familial alcohol and drug abuse, and previous victimization of the subjects were also gathered. RESULTS: Fifty-four (24.7%) of the subjects met the DSM-III-R criteria for depression. Very few of the traditional correlates of depression discriminated depressed from nondepressed subjects, suggesting that the presence of chemical dependence overrides other predictors of depression. Only female gender, paternal psychopathology, and victimization (physical abuse, sexual abuse) emerged as important variables associated with depression. However, subjects whose onset of depression preceded their chemical dependence had different characteristics from those whose depression began after their chemical dependence. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of depressive illness in these chemically dependent adolescents was approximately three times that reported for nonreferred groups of similar age. This high rate of depression reflects the contributions of two distinct groups--those with primary depression and those with depression subsequent to chemical dependence--whose characteristics differed, suggesting the possibility of two pathologic processes, similar in manifestation but with different associated features and possibly with distinct etiologies. Confirmation of these findings in further research could indicate that the two forms of depression may require different treatment approaches.
Notes:
1991
1988
Powered by publicationslist.org.